The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 12, 1919, Page 6

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SEATTLE STAR 1307 Seventh Ava Near U OF SCKIFGS NoRTUWEST LMAC “OF NEWSPAPERS cond-Claas Mattor May 8, 1899, at the Postoff Beattie, Wash. under the Act of Congress Mareh 3. 187% fst Mail, out of city, Ske per month; 3 months $1.50; 6 montha $2.75; in State of Washington. Outside the state, The per 0 @ months, or $9.00 per year, by carrier, city, Lie Sine Publishing Ca Phone Main G00, Private Deity by The eu je counecting all departments Kept the Faith “There is no doubt as to where Ole Hanson stands on issue (Americanism). He has made it clear from the tt. Your ballot cast for Ole Hanson will not be found by side with a vote of an 1. W. W., a pro-German ot iy other enemy of your countr: Mi That is a paragraph taken from a front page editorial | of The Star of March 2, 1918. Here are some further paragraphs from the same edi “The real issue is Americanism, and when a candidate Wrong on that issue today, he is wrong on everything.” “Before another year has gone by this country and city will have bled and will have suffered from this ir in a way that we little dream of today. Within a year casualty list alone will probably outnumber the i casualty list of today.” | “After we have suffered and after we have bled in to win this war, a condition such as confronts Seattle y will be impossible.” “Surely Seattle will not have to go thru this period of in order to learn its lesson. Surely the turmoil! and stress of the past year should be lesson enough.” “AMERICANISM is the issue next Tuesday. “Seattle must and will register itself overwhelmingly In that election, just 11 months ago, Seattle did ister itself overwhelmingly American. A big majority the people elected Ole Hanson mayor on the issue of ‘anism. The Star can say nothing stronger for Ole Hanson than + Ole Hanson kept faith with the city of Seattle, with people who elected him, when the test came. the Pioneer The frontier precipitated and won the civil war. The nercial draining of the Northwest thru the Erie canal the railroads to the Atlantic seaboard rather than to Gulf of Mexico decided the election of 1860 and the ulting military struggle. The conflict for the free land of the frontier made the inevitable. The undivided West was the common prop- that laid the foundation of “the Union forever, one inseparable.” © It was the democratic, individualistic spirit of the fron- that revolted from human 5 hat spirit saw ty everywhere; in the forest-clad hills, in the rippling of the prairie, and, most of all, in the continuous ing conquest of natural forces. Lincoln was the incarnation of the frontier. He was “That this nation, un- To this task we must spirit of us all today. drive out of his mind the ion, nor scolding of afer, and who resolves der God, shall have a ubordinate every selfish No true man can look heart-break of widows neighbors, nor scoffing that he will pay to fu- new birth of freedom impulse, every mean de. out upon the world with- and orphans—of mother: of friends, nor scoring of ture generations the debt and that government of sire, every unworthy am- out seeing the pall that and fathers, too—who shopmates, nor scorching that he owes to the pres- the people, by the people, bition, hangs heavy over the neglects the men who of the press, will equal ent and to the past—not for the people, shall not The spirit of Lincoln nations of all the earth. come back to us with the scourging of his own forgetting his obligations perish from the earth,” who, “with malice to- And how can any man shattered bodies and conscience in the day of to those who live today This was the high re- ward none, with charity who sees the burdens ruined minds and broken reckoning uch a man may stand solve voiced by Abraham for all,” with firmness that distress the peoples lives, isn't worthy of a jut he whose heart is beside Abraham Lincoln Lincoln in his Gettys- in the right, steadfastly of every land calmly fold place in the democracy quickened by the suf- and the martyrs of every burg address in 1863. It poured out his life in his hands and say: “It for which Lincoln ferings of humanity, who generation, feeling that was prophetic of what those trying years when is no concern of mine”? pleaded. feels that this vicarious te, too, is a citizen of we may well reaffirm to our own land was dyed Any man,who 80 #oon And let every such suffering was endured the world, a comrade in day—and with = even red with the blood of our forgets the war and its man remember that no so that his own place in the crusade for democ- greater emphasis. soldiers—must be the horrors, who tries to seorning of public opin- the world might be made racy. THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, 1919. <hv Vv) We \ “So this is a German helmet, you captured?” culmination of its spirit of equal struggle for individual Pr i¢caanaee pment. Because the frontier was an idealized com- “Yeah.” e system, Lincoln was the apotheosis of t ing all that was best and free from its most evident | — directed his hatred against whatever restricted 's freedom to develop or hampered the voice and im of the individual in society. ‘The poverty he knew was an inspiration. inable to a large percentage of the people. that gave whatever of truth ever did inhere in the f that every workman was a potential capitalist. Lincoln saw somewhat beyond this freedom to fight les of nature. Frequent phrases show he glimpsed , , . of economic forests, swamps and jungles more ficult for the individual to conquer than those of nature. Zincoin would have as little patience with one who applied only his methods and fought only the ob- of the 60s as a frontiersman would have with a rson who feared to break with an old society when prog- |» called him on to a new one. ' ‘The poverty of the open prairie, deep wounds and re- rugged nature required one solution. The poverty slums and exploitation requires another. tr In abolishing slavery, freeing industry, developing a “' tion, Lincoln handed on another set of problems for us. tn. solve, just as each generation must forever do. The ly treason to our generation is to refuse to learn the les- of the need of pioneers for each new problem. Inco Wealth was It was the NE ae taxes races. The most astonishing thing about the war was the ' way a white flag changed a battle fleet into a white ele- phant. Beating an Empty Barrel Take an empty barrel and beat it with a stick and you |’ get a good big lump of racket. ‘ » Now fill the same barrel with and again beat it. The no water or ANYTHING | se you get wouldn’t fill a good : bathroom. And what sound is given out is not of- sd open 1: mig ‘i ; z ‘ e to your ears. uth by Burmat ‘ to mutter dost This remarkable showing is due toenormous volume, A buggy with a worn wheel will make more sque: how, on patent agp fascial) aes ‘ 2 than the wheels of a dozen carriages whose hubs and axles DAR, OSE OB SNS. ran hy Tibet an wa “ eral perfected facilities (packing plants strategically located, are working in harmony. ral w " hen, PRINCE VISITS WILSON a get up into! branch houses, refrigerator cars, etc.), and an army of Do you see what we are getting at? h and PARIS, Feb President Wil - top @rint = oat : : ‘ s ‘When you meet a man or woman who does a lot of ws, but each tribe son recgived the prince of Wales at | te uae ththen tien! ‘men and women chosen and trained to do their special talking—foolish talking—you can rest assured that the aoe tee he cen, elo oe oat i ae t of the trouble they | work source of that continuous stream of wo s pretty. empty. ebacdeidente sh ciae Role: Bon ee ecm i ar nm: beers] 4 J Also—an organization that is makings lot of noise in| y—~ iat Usa et ER = ‘ ve hon vidn't | ie . é i the community and not getting ahead v ist hae '& wheal’ if LEAD: DAT AOR aes ¥ PR Mp iy cae atl This, and many other points of interest, are found in or ws post 3 pte "gps Sai pa ing. : WILLIAM HOHENZOLLERN H t get any sound) the Swift & Company Year Book for 1919, just published € individual we would ay talk or enough eee o~ ms mussel h : 3 : get the other fellow to give “ea his best Sicel bie) Te ; 5 works vi ponies oa Fy i Mgt which is brought out for the public as well as for the To the organization—if there is a squeak in your plant, bay get "Tanlac ere 5 nein oaal qi 25,000 Swift & Company shareholders. fix it AT ONCE. Me Cooke) aver. Giine ie any geod, T hogan | : stat ad Se Ni SRS: 2 aking this medicine. By the time I ’ A The fighting is over now, and we must remember oa Dias tol ted aauehieh Heyy! mage about me| im The Year Beak also sagrenants the packer : wide, of that the best of friends look out for the first person Jped—yea, and, ‘groveling so Tecan my Tanlac beats any-| fi the Federal Trade Commission investigation, upon which singular in a trade. P i 5 Sere aver FOR Rerete i SOR See Co: i ed to ba i i i Ah si cassia Aocses. Sielan's: sheet yeits,: J haven't: had to tose a [A gress is asked to base action against the industry. a é x A woman lovely, pale and tall minute from my work since that Logging Railroad Bill With sensi White Dany tod. shining. bal, ee rere arereat = thors Fa Many who have never heard the packer’s side are Senate bill No. 95, introduced at Olympia by Hastings| nothing hurts me. My kidneys a nding ear Boo Peed would put a stop to the hold-up method of cits ‘ Salat evecetae t ee winia nian ee . rte is » sivas os rmen who build and operate logging railroads. ~s diye hie ye have q eb Hearn on aes i It proposes to classify logging railroad a common re a thered i - iF res sharin aeatine pr gorial Would you like one? Merely mail your name and €arriers and put them under the direction of the public {than T have in years.” | address to the Chicago office and the book will come to you. Service commission. And wept. We scorn, and mock, and: spit, praniac ts roid in Seattle by Barten | Ii Under present conditions, lumbermen who have and sek renee Oe ae Se eee | Brag, Deeret water, he, perenne! | Address mono of logging railroads, refuse to carry the logs of And even now i# rotting at the root! ative.—Advertisement it 2 ll timber owners, and fo the little fellows to. sell] <a ne] Swift & C im an out at less than their timber is worth. | YeGl thailncle gore Hie ee i : 0 Pp 4 Such an unjust situation should ve fair treatmen | er you shall hold, beneath the eaneh ti Union Stock Yards, Chicago by the legislature. But unfortunately, Howard Taylor, The last gray dust of Royal birtt im genate boss, and some of the chief lieutenants in the house| ‘ — ae , ‘tk Seattle Local Branch, 201-11 Jackson St. a era voring ; m Thaw urill ies \ ut v i . NOT FORGET that you were bor Mi r peat Of Tyrar that masks in other guise ue bets een public interest Line that we deapine Headquarters for | with their leader: Q ially over-7 a ar then fomrsreedona 4 Suits, Coats and Mf Berl of city ut in the hands of the public service \ r chi ie in pa One-Piece Dresses i LF As type and symbol of our shame Will they do the same as to logging railroads? —\ | Joneph ¥ who has after riginal Ww YORK An negroes, Fast ten Tula of Newly = WHAT W Discovered Human | Beings Don’t Know There Was a Great World War There arefeach man is world! «when ¢ with anot and pay no war scovered by Dr Indiana, South and other |! cans how there, and not explain ti the Chines them gunpowder apeara 01 guns, the This ne William of Hohenzollernt | Would rather ing their fave o tr r the solution both peopl Lincoln—A Comrade in the Crusade for Democracy Coming Home With the Yanks! © oe a yi, a cut “Well—what's the idea—a steel helmet for an ivery dome?” WAR? Millions AR? bearnan mounting to the wealthy r been a mission ze that there are These natives make the best unable Bu ney ri A woe pomeen their fghting with pneene £608 te sock: 5 ae eet This is bringing the producer and the consumer aarti, be | Sore ea Weer, Gey ‘ pretty close together—which should be the object of any grey oh ga ogra ; industry turning raw material into a useful form. BY THE REV. CHARLES STELZLE LETTERS TO THE EDITOR WHICH FLAG? | Germany, but at the tine I am writ (Written for The Seattle Star) — jing this letter it is still 1918 in Ken | Which flag do you fly, O, frien@?/ton. The weather is fine here, con Which flag? widering the time of the year, We ‘The Stars and the Stripes or a biood-|are getting a little rain, but not } | DR. STELZLE SAYS TODAY: | BY REV. CHARLES STELZLE A lot of my friends had been tell <A ——A truths; to take aa jings mentally.” And. one's proper bear- ing me lately that they were becom: | different evidently, that's what my friends were doing; they were take tock ted about | ing things: Md of themnelive ti after a while, I guessed that it| ee oe . red rea? enough to do any damage, od You can't fly both, a la Jekytl ana| 1 received your Christmas package cular word lined up with the big new Hyde. lyenterday, It was certainly fine. | t I thought it nt they | cs that are happening in the For now t# the time that you must/ Your cake was splendid, but it had to ’ e with some | world today decide. eo @ long way, for 1 had nurses, the 1 Chinamen. | Wor they saw that “old things The imme is joined, the reds have! captain and buck privates to divide it i it up in the diction-| 0. nassing away: all thines tl struck, with, I would have received it on |9*Y 89d was amazed to find out bow |) one nam i ne ch the dictionary men could make word mean; and they entioned the Japanese or the nen. sald a good deal about the and the sunrise, and precious | 7 ASHING' $F Istones and getting batidings ang| WASHINGTON, Feb. 12.—That |corpres placed right; but the chief Franklin D. Roosevelt, assistant thing the word nt was “to ad-| secretary of the navy, is to be U.S, just or correct by referring to first |ambassador to Paris, was the report |principles or recognized facts or in well-informed cirelés today. And trafied our fing thru the mire|Christmas day if we had stayed in and muck | France, #0, you see, it was gauged And the cause of it all, their damatng | just right. Nearly all the boys work plan, ing in this ward got 4 package, so Of sowing discord far and wide you can judge we had a pretty fair | To rally the madbes to thetr mide, | spread. | Has hypnotized the working man. | | just returned from a little stroll ‘Talk about fortifications these people certainly have them From what I bear, it is the same ail over the country. FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT MAY BE AMBASSADOR sta With native sons or with alien band? | Step out, O, brother; do not lag, But bold and fearless choose your! They have concrete dugouts in Pe aay fag side hilla, and forts that would be Which fag, O, brother; say, which; Pretty hard to take, Iam glad the ra vaca co S.5) Instantly! Sfomach Feels Fine! Get aman Scr tre erwe teen (NQ. Indigestion, Gases or Acidity ‘There is but one straight texsue drawn, | American boys go up againet some of | The challenge ta, “We'll rule or rutn, | these places. It would have been sure |Join opr ranks, or nothin’ dotn’” | @eath for a big bunch sintsnaidilaiicemeestiinnen Where's our boasted freedom gone? There is an American aviation | Shall we humbly bow the knee net up on the hill above us, and | In thie land of liberty? we went up there, and, as luck 1 be fr have it, the great German ace, Capital as free to a 8 who shot down Roonevelt, ite reedom ts a fa o try out a new ver to the Ameri Stomach upset? Belching acids, gases and sour food? to choone, Instant relief awaits you. Just the moment Pape’s Liberty must stand fone Choose you now this day which flag, “29% Of & pretty fying I ever | D ‘ , - © t t iapepsin reaches the stomach | low did in the b: all the indigestion, dyspepsia, rag 7 the end was a { He must have straight, and the wh: machine broke when b SAW GERMAN ACE FALL agente mgpece nay (The following letter is from Jobn iy. miadie ue. gases, heartburn and sourness vanish. No waiting! Magic! Don’t suffer! —<. W. Scarft. under his nded, and plitting in pretty badly as Costs little, at any drug Arth with ne ne - Dt 3 rthur, with the American Army of |).71 and was rushed to a hospital store. Eat favorite foods Occupation, at Coblens, to his moth: | spout two minutes after the fall, I ceittsiest eal er ra, George Arth of Re y . ae =e vitor car. ante George Arthur, of Renton,| oyeained a mnall piece of the propel-| Weil, mother I ny regards to all. a rou Dear Mother: It is now 1919%n |. BEATS ANYTHING, I'VE EVER SEEN IN ALL MY LIFE” { otisilion | | Waitz Relieved by Tanlac After Suffering Twenty Years. | iupset? Pane’s Dianensin Sick’ 13 Dollars—13 Cents When Swift & Company paid, say,—13 dollars per hundredweight for live beef cat- tle last year, their profit was only 13 cents! In other words, if we had paid $13.13, we would have made no profit. quarrels Not tn years,” said Phillip Waits, while in the French D: Store, Tacoma, recent disagrees * foun Waits itven in what Tacoma, at 23rd and Law noe streets, He has been a resi-| t of that city for nearly twenty: five years. Taniac has certainly been remark able in my cnse. he continued, “for it haw not only relieved mo of my | terrible suffering, but I have actually gained fifteen pounds in wright and just finished my third bottle. have, dunt ‘nia my thi bol Or, if we had received a quarter of acent ach sod Ritueve for wenty reare| per pound less for dressed beef we would have made no profit. is known is killed. But|™ t the dead iren. That se and killing i] When I told about the had just to do me any good. The pains In the small of my back and shoulders and| hip and knee were awful. | Sometimes in #0 much 1 ‘They know | 2° nee 1 was in #o much misery n my left It is doubtful whether any other business is run on in China, for! that 1 couldn't get nd at all and) oude : would lay off from my work i CE Tan p epaisthg cgay tinge portage d so close a margin of profit. the weather began to get warm last the woods, thin heip 425 Union Street

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