The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 18, 1919, Page 6

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— THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1919. 'Head of D. A. R. in’ Portland Toda. "Omelet of the Balkan States “ss Portland Toda, Trying to Unscramble Itself om m= ovr ae tern of the Revolution, @ 4 here inat ttend the r, DA 1d this after- Multnomah. The @ continued tomorrow, wan accompanied Jame Fowler, Mbrarian and Mrs. Frank Dexter Bl regent of Massachumetts, A Line or Two From Washington [THE ‘SEATTLE STAR 1307 Seventh Ava Near OF scnirrs NORTHWEST LEAGUE Ore Veton st. ov NEWSPAPERS c Americar ih prmeerentneesnansmnsiesems BY LIKUT, COL American Red Cross Investigator ‘4 Assigned by N. BE. A. to Write of va , Conditions in’ the Hallaans of an inol BALAONIKA, Feb. The Mace donian omelet ws to be trytt unscramb! If, as a tion to mult, speaking — the Thi thinking themselves the | lity, find them HOMER FOLKS bodies hang that of a wo the United Preas Amectation night to man, one a one-legged man At the Postaffice at 18T®, S27b: ‘be per ety, Lie 3, 1899, of Congress Mareh 3. out of city. . Wee per month; “3 months, $1.50; Be 00, in t ate of Washington, Outside Un 4.50 for @ muoatha, or $9.00 per year, By © scond-Claas Matte. Wank | under the Act thie man was mayor uted village. Hin people of the ing, and t larger rn of usk for food for hin pe Bul and to ing cut happen the ————— —_—__——— ite net re ttar Publishing Co. Phone Main 600, Private depertmeata. Mre keneral , state ame troublesome Dally by The ke language and of the | selves grouped. bility may have Just now in the Asta Minor the comings ard goings of maasen of wed hither and thither by the upheaval of the war, in literally chao Everywhere group urian militar authorities pr t interferenc off. ‘Thi Division No. 5 Will Meet Tonight council of patriotic Tuesday evening Warren Avenue another such anno of hin legs ¥ to b many 0 ys Time to ‘Live Life Over Again. Naturally, you'd laugh if this happened in your home Little four-year-old Vivian was crying, so her grand x asked her what the trouble was Oh, everything goes wrong,’ sobbed Vivian. “I just wish T had my, whole life to live over again.” And grandma laughed ;| really was funny! “My — child,” nome element of sta de been 1 to the reported ‘ Halkans and in of thene picture Division No. 6 service, will meet at & o'clock in the people, t 4 mar 1 Ser tume are being bound officers cle Just back aning on @ a little f Bu e the process arian school The question of people are of complete reor- ne purpose of taking of t councils of service, will be brought be ing for discussion and of the Seattle board service will the future going nomewhere eks who nh sg - | had been deported into coming k to Greece. as refugees into the ole ertfan ilgaria are nization for ka inter Bul three womuar c up future stout upright | patriot randma i oak ya ied 2 tio probably smiled, “you have The streams of In al ctures the members | of councils of patrioth your whole life before you into ve, Ital 1 France |] | of the execution squad show the ut. | be age pp Pla outline You wa just starting. But are beginning r ach most complacency. — __work ¢ , if you feel that you must live a new life, why, begin it now; just pretend that you are a new little girl, for- getting all the things that ‘went wrong’ and try to ye the things that ‘go right.’” Vivian, maybe, is living her life anew, but the chances} had gone lor going back garian frontier it the mee Officer are ard the with ros en with places for the terbians who went thene p oun es rhe deported ulgaria are cans returning Arm vived). Hane (uch of them as sur out their homen, t Turks who had rtions of Turkey turned At this man's dimensions have multitudes laughed; | over to Crenoe, Serbia and Hulgaria at the end of the last Balkan war in | He's truly tremendous , is BIG BILL TAPT. » returning te cupled b Col, Folks, selected by N. BE. A to report conditions in the Balkan countries, was in charge of eivillan | relief work in France during the war, and has been given the order of the White Eagle by the ruler of Serbia for work on behalf of Ser vem left the 9 THE oxp de- 1913 | Serbian prisoners of war are com that some several thousand times during the next 60) Vivian again will wish she had her whole life to over. Most human beings come to that wish; often, | only after they have traveled far down the road ff mistakes. We'd be more successful in the management} our lives. We'd do things differently; we'd do things ch we left undone, and we'd refrain from doing things did. Doubtless the world would be thickly populated Rockefelle Napoleons, Wilsons, Edisons, , if lives could be lived over again. © It’s a pleasant dream—living our lives listen, it is NOT a dream. It can be done. EN. Men and women do live their lives over in’s grandma was right: Start again, that’s do to live one’s life over again. "New lives, worth while lives, are daily erected upon the ruins of hless lives, miserable lives. Courageous have turned when near the bottom of path and have come back to success, in What was that but a new life? life over again? for need a person have long years ahead of him to} his life over again. The thief on the cross lived his| over again in his last moment of earthly some over again. It is done. again. all one successful and happ) men the down- honor and Wasn't that from that moment start living their lives over again among them are the tottering gray-beard and the less youth. Peace delegates are apparently unanimous in the —" that it isn’t safe to trust anybody except Uncle Much Politics The next congress, if let alone, ing than legislating. There are national problems that) erying for solution, but there is no indication that con-) is giving any thought to the subject. They are con-! with a policy of drift. Almost any republican or anti-Wilson democratic polt-| in will tell you with enthusiasm that at last they are) to be in a position to investigate this, that and the| ther thing. Bill Jones once worked a week in a shipyard f says there is something wrong at such and such a Let’s investigate! Si Splevins was in France as worker. He says our boys were simply sacrificed a’ yee Let’s investigate! This is no exaggeration. _ Among the things that will probably come under in- tigation in the next congress are the following: ‘arious angles of the war game in France as conducted! American commanders. - Ammunition making. Ordnance manufacture. Housing projects. War risk bureau. Army promotions. There is believed to be meat in this for the presiden-| campaign. If a fishing expedition can be organized, we is chance the Americafi people will be led into think-! about extravagance and waste. The president and his can be pilloried. An appeal can be made to all itisfied elements. And it’s safe! You don’t alienate any interests. On the other hand, to tackle the great domestic prob- is fraught with campaign danger. For instance, here ‘are the things that are pressing for solution: The future of railroad management. The future of the ships the nation owns. The labor disputes problem. The predominance the five big packers ican food world. ; A decent tax schedule that will place the burden of edad for the war—by retirement of bonds—where it be- On the shoulders of those best able to pay, rather than those least able to dodge. have in the The reason Turkey wants us to bos is because she knows we won't gobble sight. Be Sure to Wein The polls remain open till 8 p. time to vote. the Dardanelles everything in m. You have plenty of With the aid of voting machines in nearly every precinct, the voting process is cut down to a mini- mum of time. As an American citizen, your duty today, if you are registered, must not be neglected. é This city must be steered safely, for the ‘the majority of the people, in true American This is a government where the ballot fore, let not your ballot go to waste. Three councilmen, who have given thru many years, are up for re-election. C. B. Fitzgerald, councilman since 1914, finance committee, has been eminently fair in Possessed of vigor, strength and ability, he is renomination and re-election. William Hickman Moore has judge of the superior court, and was elected to the council. His known. R. H. Thomson, councilman for the past three years, is an expert engine As city engineer for 19 years, he achieved national reputation. f benefit of fashion. rules, there- thi city service head of hi entitled to of Sez before been mayor tate senator qualification ’ ttle, well iti mistake If the kaiser is really growing a beard, ably in the hope that St. Peter will Carranza. prob- for It may be all right for us to join a society of na tions, but getting into society is an expensive business. Shakes-|¢ misspent lives,|' and); existence. | gates in every state open daily to human beings} will do more investi-; the service, | Nev You’re Sure Going to Hear Some War Songs When the Yanks Hit the Home Town : WASHINGTON « b at the be We're going to ys are coming back by the the ongs now th sande from t Remember all th fatter t |duce old war ne popular for rev y probat eral years war with Spain ended? The war with Germa will pro as man ging. It ful lit, and sounds fine, aa well as funny omes from dozens of throat inated as a Canadian art but our boys have adopted | ue wit ¢ French jargon they i » the wor sone the who have just returned from France, has at when ing home re are “ you're looking for the know whe DOWN INA I (REFRAIN) I saw them I naw ther Down in m, lug-out I saw them, I saw them in @ deep dugout | I saw them Down sergeants, | ‘ PRIVATES’ RUM Repeat refrain) If you're 1 kr OUT ON soking THE for the corporal. where they are, et OLD BARBED WIRE (Repeat refrain) If you're looking for the privates I know where they are, ete UP TO THEIR NECKS IN MUD! (Repeat refrain) If you're looking for promotion, | BACK IN THE 8. O. 8. {LETTERS TO THE EDITOR) WHO IS PATRIOTIC? Editor % | wh I know where it is—ete— writer can You rarely find triotic, the perne tien wrart canneries in Alaska who are hiring Short-sighted pec the aliens who turned in their first pa were called by raft, or we few Americans who can- }not get @ position? The Ketchikan Progressive M October 15 ianue, stated in an editorial that a cannery |near there left two of that kind to watch it last wi | A SPANISH WAR VET Wh Service, Too. nee these magnetic « & uniform clans should look Suppone 3,000,000 moat ahead just a little of 4,000,000 ex-service men should or ganize politically. They'd just about domb party, wouldn't they? The G. A. R. dominated politica! matters for at least the otvt! war, The Star, as uenal, ts putting up a game fight for the exeervice men When war nigh God and the soldier ta all the ory The war is over, all things righted, God ta forgotten, the eoldier te alight. on EX-SOLDIER. pers when they me fa near and danger is SUZZALIO AND LAMPING BILL, | Editor The Star: The Star of the lith contained an editorial |headed “Lamping Bill and Suzzaiio,” which Dr. Suzzallo was asked to ne his position on the Lamping inst THE ALBERS CASK FAltor The Star; Meveral readers of your paper are interested In learn ing the final dociaton tn the case of | Albers for violation of the explonage act. The Inst we read was that a sealed verdict had been returned, In this the last we will hear of the | pint The editorial spoke of the doctor's personality, and of his in legislature magnet fuer © with the Ww, as an exnol there are have it necessary to of W matter some things I would like cleared up. Why t# have the president of the U Olympia? What the lieutenant-governor if Gov ? Dr. Sumallo draws a as president of the universit r umns what further action has been taken or may result? 1. 8. with Li t salary does he no Its ms that the fate of the Lamp FAitor’s ng bi pen th man Ni found guilty SMUTZ, 1120 34th ave. Albern was pending sen 0 bal wm ~~~ - AFTER 5,000 YEARS | ooo a New taking —— broken the world of 3 Herman horthand re rk cov down 1,5 rt reporter has at the rate 0 word 00 words a minute, with mistakes 1 n the histo hie development. It represents mer and mpt lay und writing teaches us that man is never of doing t rmed with flint-headed atte thoughts in to express writing r a word a The k y of satisfied, Et As far back tem was inv The mansbi Laborious was at hi lown hi If we tern extends ba alphabets erna ¢ seeks a quicker wa ng une 1 short cut The first sys of Cicero « the ed by M ter, 1 fuced in ed, were mar Romans we find shorthand in us Tullius Tiro, the retary which man called machinery to his 14 by Henry Mill, an first attempts at writing eries of crude typew ul uid in pen was intr the thought 0 si belie ‘a struggle 0 years ago, Niaux These pictures and black o: of manganose, The artiat-writer, ignorant of eave a message for future men about most important in the court reporter? First of all, it marks the highest point attained by un effort that has gone on unceasingly thru from | Man's progress is slow, painfully slow, but it of Herman J, St | of man 1ows that when hand labor is backed by dual has unlimited possibilities: A few week Now come to perfect a writing when the first writer's in the Pyrennes moun irawn ou show h language A great hunt shorthand record established by walla of ca nd Fr irew pletures on th uverns near tains between Spain a ance 1 mixture of ¢ Uline with ps, cave men and bisons any was trying to the the human race In 0 to 1,000 centuries alKo Kure ich further illustrates the wonders possible effort of the brain, the ndiv igo it was thought that 190 words a minute was the ble in taking down shorthand. in obsoure court reporter and almost doubles the speed Man has perfec nothing. All is subject to change, |The goal t 1 which we strive is like the horizon | une We er reach the last word in anything, for 4 milestone on the path and new po: once we reach tt jit becomes ible goals emerge from the foxe As man has » hotter the living d thru centuries of the ouraging “ete to perfect writing common man It ie a hard fight but » there is improvement vision of the better things that lle ahead if we continue the | 80 has he tolled condition ulwa years after! cane, or can you advise tn your cob | ing back from Bulgaria I have seen pleture posteard. found on an Austrian prisoner which stands a row of eight gallows from om wings a victim the foreground Austrian sol and off extreme bt of the pieture a 4 lean the ft pont 1 an officer who had * Good Reading Is Still in Demand 1 of whiel On the adder upright rig climbed the for Service Men ° renig when it comes to send or monthly consign surplus books and maga library or the war ix the plea Don't week ment of aines to the pub of our patriotic book custodians That bethumbed copy of Top," now relegated to your book f, will wtill be enjoyed hy some lad in khaki who had to apend hi Ameri ean cantonment and can only dream of “the real thing” as seen by Guy Empey. And thone expensive techni cal magazines, up for future reference, w a double pur “Over the she lonesome war porvice at an ontemplating ear the prospect of hunting you were not remiss during the war period, but Jong hours of reading in barracks and ts have reduced good old books to tatters, and our boys need up-to-themin that renti who is discharge and a job. True anyway “WOULDN'T TAKE 4 FORTUNE FOR THE 00D IT DID ME”, Tanlac Proves of Untold) Value to This Man— | Gains Twenty-One Pounds, | | I wouldn't take a fortune for the food Taniac haa done me, for it has} | not only restored my health, but has / added twenty-one pounds my | weight, and I feel like a different man in every way,” mid Peter Ried lued employe of the Pacific ndry Co. whose residence y wt, Portland, Oregon About elght months ago,” he con: |tinued, “f had a bad spell of the | grippe, and it left me in a very bad- | |'y rundown condition, and until I began taking Tanlac, I was not able |to find a thing that would get me | | started up hill again. My appetite! and my stomach was n such bad condition that the little I did eat would give me indigestion. | Sometimes, for three or four hours |after my meals, I would be all bioat- ed up with gaa and suffer something | awful with shortness of breath 1 was badly constipated most of the time, and occasionally suffered from headaches. My kidneys gave me lots and I had a dull, pain across the amajl of my all the time, All my strength seemed er ly eave me, and I lost a lot in weight jand finally got so weak and worn: | out that I had to give up my work, « I waa not able | Wes, a ¥ jCar F in 852 € was very poor | | of trouble, also, bac and energy and for three mo I heard Portland talking 1c was doin to bu a few would help me it any folks around about the good this I de bottlen and see Well, sir, I beliew in possible for any to impr foster than I did I began taking that medicine appe improved from the first bottle, the condition of my stomach improved much that I could eat anything I wanted, and I ld not have in digestion afterwards, I kept on tak jing T © and the more I took the better I felt, and after taking six bottles all my troubles disappeared Iam never bothered with that pain in m and my kidneys seem to be in good condition. T am rid of constipation, and never have a head ache at I have gained a lot in weight, in fact I weigh more today than I ever weighed in my life, and, thanks to Tanlac, I am well and strong in every way as I ever was, und am glad to recommend it to everybody Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell therm that soon #0 just wo Drug Stores under the personal di- | rection of a special Tanlac represent: | ative.—Advertisement. TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street bian refugees mission in the Near Kast. reading bug habita iif i ih ‘i pendable laxative which tones and stimulates the digestive organs as it cleanses. He heads an Ameri Ked Cross investigating com and IN s leaning forward in y to the HE WANTED TURE ther such p! swinging body TO BE matter the demar ng mat is greater tt r the em For more than thirty-five the to preserve the » warriors have developed vars Lash’s has hel Nation’s health. ie along with rum other « acquired th itary disch Why Swift & Company Poultry, Eggs, Butter and Cheese Swift & Company went into the produce business becanse they saw a crying need for the kind of service they were equipped to perform. The produce business was in chaos. Collecting, transporta- deterioration and loss on every hand. The farmer was at the mercy of an uncertain, localized market. He had no way of reaching through to the people who needed what he was raising for them. There was no premium upon improving his stocks, for grading was lax or lacking. The consumer had to accept produce that, as a rule, had no known responsible name behind it. He had no way of knowing how long the eggs or the butter he was buying had been lying around in miscellaneous lots in the back room of a country store. Much of the poultry was not properly refrigerated before ship- ment or properly protected by refrigeration in transit. Swift & Company’s initiative brought system to this chaos. Their organization, equipment, and experience in handling perish- able food products were already adjusted to the task. Their refrigerator cars, branch houses, central points, far-reaching con- nections, trained sales force, supplied just what was demanded. Now the farmer has a daily cash market in touch with the nation’s needs with better prices. Standardization makes better produce more profitable. More consumers are served with better, fresher, finer foodstufis. Nothing suffers from this save inefficiency, which has no claim upon public support. Swift & Company, U.S.A. Seattle Local Branch, 201-11 Jackson St. \ J. L. Yocum, Manager _

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