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

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

as mre |S | EDITORIALS FEATURES — The Awakening of the Male Interest in Closet Room.—By Webster. More, and Then More sa oe Cees - — : - ~\ / ™ { ANO Tar’s ) | SAME Mart Wine | _ ) Always maor | | Furt of me For PAYING © MuLH ATYENTIOM Te CLosers we” APART AE CTS, i On the Issue of || Americanism Zhere Can Be No Compromise Detours iy 4 H By DI. FRANK CRANE Fs) omM-™ (Copyright, 1919, vy vrank © Closer, HAVE Roomy Cte SBE MOW 1 CouLD Pur | BIGGER MH ty LOOKS & CASES ON TH FLOOR ( (eva Pur Te 5 MoRE or Tor OF ‘Er Are TUR In THEee By TAK irgouT Tea MELE ! CAREROL YA Cart Coet0 Ger ir 5 oe 6 Morr SQUEEZE Im ‘Bour NO, Thins APART RET tq CASES An’ Pen 4 5 ey TY BOTTLES A Ney | Zr MOT A VERY LARGE 1 Sime ry MusT €TS.LE Andrew Carnegie wrote of the very rich man “He must consider his surplus trust funds as held for the community, and the best means of distribution is by giving free libraries, parks, works of art, and public insti tutions of various kinds.” 3 “What does my father want with more money: D. Rockefeller, Jr. : : The Carnegie quotation answers the Rockefeller, Jr. question. ’ : It is likely that in the careers of men like Carnegie and Rockefeller there comes a time when the passion for Money-making burns out. So many millions have been @massed that the possibility of adding a few more to the pile doesn’t furnish the business interest and zest for the effort. When a THAT Closet 5 \ When you are out automobiling and come! — His phile y to a detour you don’t sit down and ery or body ‘Don't p wait for somebody to come along and take | “They don't you to an asylum. You make the detour | it.” and rather enjoy the adventure. rf Life is full of detours, necessary but un- ie Deere a: a: pla Ore. Teenie expected and unwanted new roads, Those io t bel on that PW helieve that 4H |who arrive at contentment must follow | {On 7 Delleve tna™ mers who. Wate any a by-path blind are normal human beings who, having many a by lost one faculty of perception, must develop Sir Arthur others.” publisher, was F According to Sir English dailies and a string of magazines happiness does not thruout Great Britain. In the prime of | things or leading a comfortable existence; } life, in the midst of a career of wealth and | neither does it come from any self-given power, he mysteriously lost his sight. The | order to be “glad.” Happiness comes front greatest specialists could do nothing. This | doing, from the forthputting of one’s man in the thick of a myriad activities was | creative faculties; he who has learned this | suddenly condemned by fate to spend the want —John know that conception of the average blind man is to read Pierson, the great English the proprietor of five big Arthur’ fron point of view, veg “4 come accumulating ¥ man has spent years in buying anything he 3, fancied, it is natural that he runs out of fancy and that oyment of luxury is impossible to him. ‘o want a thi you'vi S sort of ved of it, some ing, you've got to feel some sort of a need . of craving, some degree of willingness to make effort it. This sort of psychological condition is not possible a fellow who has got everything or who can get what hasn't got by simply ordering the butler to go out and it in. When your Carnegie, or Rockefeller, has piled up his ndreds of millions, he satisfies himself with the obses- a that he is the viceregent of the Almighty in money ers; that he is divinely entrusted with vast hoards sause he can spend the money better than could the titude from which it was wrung or won. He must der his surplus millions as “trust funds held for the amunity.” Luxury having paled thru familiarity and the os rest of his days in darkness. He had” come to a detour. He took it like a good motorist. He had not lost his nerve, he said; he had simply lost his optic nerve, He sold his papers and devoted himself to the business of showing the blind how to get on. He became the head of St. Dunstan’s Hostel for Blinded Soldiers and {Sailors in Regent's park, London. There | needs no man’s pity. The only real tragedy of life is inhibition, paralysis by discouragement or fear. The man who has lost his sight, the king who has lost his throne, the child who hasq broken her tea set, or the woman who has lost her love, are apt to be panicky. But the triumph of life consists in feating defeat. What the blind can do, you can do, O, Down-and-Outer. Buck up. Make the | detour. de- jhe taught the gospel of happy detours. on for the mere game of money-getting having burnt / GY } ‘ ; if out, “distribution” strikes the Carnegie or ge ‘ Y ler as something new and interesting, a purpose in life ‘CE RLE SEILER ANIM AS TI ARMS ANTS en other purposes have gone stale. ; The League of Nations Of course, “distribution” of the community trust funds 4 the form of libraries, parks and art works that the BY N. D. COCHRAN herd can look at but cannot touch is the proper . To distribute the community fund in the shape of tter wages for Standard Oil or Steel Trust employes d smack of restitution, and there’s a decided difference n distribution and restitution. To restore would be! | confession by a Carnegie of taint onhis title of dis- butor by divine selection. Young Mr. Rockefeller’s father, very likely, wants more money so as to distribute BY N COCHRAN ! Knox, opposing the | of construction { Nations, saye that It is| the covenant tional in that it turns!conform to t -commo! gee these | body of delegates representing the high contracting par of meets entire ings at more frequent meetings of | uncons | » constitution of the|an executive council, and that of over to the exeoutive council of the| United States. They lose altogether | permanent international secretariat, |league the power to declare and|that threatening and dangerous) This means only that when the make war for us and fix our arma-| character and effect which Senator | nigh contracting parties wish ment | Knox and other ‘critics would 4t-| take joint action it is to be taken President Taft tach to them delegate to no-| thru such meetings. This does nota ue of Nation’ body but vest these bodies with power except he president and tional agenc in esp ly ribed in the atify this covenar in good faith succeeding art unust ‘3 by virtue of their under the co 1 thru instrumen senaene * of) means what and method by does not confer authort are Wo be performed. the body of delegates or the em to a contract with another nation | formance of them. ecutive council, but only designates: on any subject matter, usually the| “jy the first article the action of the way in which the high contract subject matter of treaties between the high contracting parties under|ing parties shall thru their repreg - nations subjéct to the limitation | the covenant are to be effected thru| sentatives express their joint agree , able to reflect all the fine color touches of the), that the treaty may not change the | the instrumentality of a meeting of! ment and take action.” | form of government of the United) -—— hers \terfeiter Caught! The New York health authorities had a Brook- | tory ; compositions, will make life happier in Seattle. | \ Cnite at last Seattle has a Symphony orchestra, thanks | 1 SpE re oat wer Gok pains of tee f : United States, without the consent! lyn Manufacturer sentenced to the penitentiary for selling throughout | the United States millions of “Talcum powder” tablets as Aspirin Tablets, foresight of a generous group of citizens. The first) is scheduled for tonight at Masonic temple. { —_—_—— Some day, we hope, this Symphony will be playing Starshells Don’t buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer packagef Never ask for just Aspirin Tablets! Always say, the thousands instead of to hundreds. If the war Son ‘are frequent subject. met r of 0 auditorium is built, the Symphony can be a vital r : SUGOSLAY VIEW | body constituted by a League of Na- | to hear good music. And those of us who don't Editor The Star: No truer thing was ever writ-| tions, the power and function to do} w good music will soon begin to get acquainted if given) Herbert Corey. As a JugoSlay by descent, I thank| making power or any other branch you sincerely for exposing the Italian perfidy. Our|of the United States government ARs f a +} ‘ , se: we ind especially all children, should have every opportunity | “Give me a package of ‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’ it. wholeeale arrests of teachers, clergy, leaders, banish-| United States to do anything, i) Insist that every Aspirin Tablet you take must come John Spargur, conductor of the Symphony, must be “ee ment to concentration camps, expatriation, all sorte| must be done by the branch of the | ee tceaat ab heeLouldite, Ey, Pook Tullis” againat: the .Avmesians, ant they. wale treaty may bind the United | Must appear on this package and on each tablet. areata 4 ‘ r perfect brothers, But they sball not pase! Shoulé es to make or not make war in} treaties, ‘The president and senate | tional influence. ten than the account of Itallan ¢ “ge in the occu-| which ix vested by the federal con ce. Music, like every other worthy educational in- American Jugo-Slavic journals of all shades contain |!t, therefore, follows that whenever | ; nf = i. “Recer C ” to understand that the community is behind him, and TOO LATE FOR HER TO ENJOY IT of getty nugeing, etc. The Italians need to take|sovernment vested by the constitu) in the regular Bayer package and the “Bayer Cross nit they s@cceed temporarily, tn lees than por specific contingency; it may! Following nece supporting the saye enate are to tified as it des power to power, | become has held, en bles them to bind the United States means Even those of us who have no technical knowledge of | } understand that a Symphony orchestra of 60 skilled! , ] of the state. Letters to Editor se = er, may not, howe confer on any| Because almost every normal man, or woman, or child, A WORD FROM Foc ste nani pied parts of Jugo-Slovakia by your correspondent, stitution in congress, the treaty) ere ain man) ee, should be for the great masses. Entire families, | org 7 Pre ditlead cilia off precisely similar accounts of Italian persecution--| the treaty making power binds the ; : yhen s rr e age of 212 «i s tolonly’ one step mores 1. @, the step of the ferocious | on with that function iteful to him, and eager to see all his dreams come true... V2" the Arges at he ake of he Is to . ; of the ferocious | Uo | sta J any The reason Canadian troops are to be brought back from Siberia is because Canada doesn't want to grab anything out there and doesn’t care much what anybody else grabs. Some of our Seattle policemen threaten to walic even five miles to their beats, now that free rides have been cut out. Gosh! That won't leave any time to sleep on "em. German officers are on their way to re-organiz the Hungarian army, but, of course, we are too chiv- alrous to start anything until they get ready. He has mighty little influence who can't stir up sentiment enough to start a league for some purpose or other these days. The war department has shipped 70,000 pounds of garden seed to France, Think how many votes a con- gressman could have cinched with that amount of seed. The Hungarians chose the most efficient means of making it Budapestilence. D ANC “OOK When I was 5 years old, or #0, With 10-year-olds at play, I used to think how much I'd know When I was old as they, , surely twice as wise again As they, when my ripe years were 10. When I waa in my high school years And mixed with lads in college, { marveled at the low-speed gears Of their scholastic knowledge “Walt till I hit their road,” said I, “And watch me speed along on high.” When I first earned my fifteen per, I used to watch the bows, And seemed to the his efforts were An almost total loss. “Well, well! if I just had his start, 1 think I'd show ‘em who was smart.” Now that I've struggled hard and tong Upon the arduous way, 1 watch my rivals going strong Who pass me day by day ‘The lucky dogd! Had J their chance i'd be even further in advance When I am 80-0dd, perhaps And hobbling with a erutch, i'l look askance at other chaps Whose legs are feebler, much, And, “O, how «pry I'll be!” I'll say Watch me, when I'm as old (Copyright, 1918, this, my “was a Another wonderful thing I lamped in first visit to New York,” postcards EB. A tree with @ bird on one of the limbs. from surely How up their necessity! to leave us a Carso now the an the deftly are predatory Yes, they ’ a es says the like water the tax collector blessing to live in a country German people are figuring that either the will get it. What @ \our quicksilver where there are 10 | worid: they Bolshevik! to fear! Here in this country all we have and elsewhere to to fear is the grocer, the butcher, the shoe man, /and American the clothier, the milliner, the dressmaker, the haber: |matian Riviera: they fasher, the manicurist, the barber—(To be continued.) |iastly shut us out fr seh the economic ¢ GO AMEAD, SIT DOWN ANY Siehee Sea Ga: © Lord! t we are one million million of the Czech-Slovake, will evidently jenemy of the Italy—back to swallow up no less A Be spending mone Bolsheviki or pateh inter were LACK, WE DON'T CAKE Februsry 26, My, {liver us other shore Te that fair land God guide your way And loved ones greet you Some sweet day Balk lis ne paaserout pas! rd. K. There throngs of guests of BY THE The value o length but by its qu oe It isn’t @ HANDICAP ON A FAMILY NEWSPAPER the ground, but how t there be no mistakes In personalities caused YOU are put into the imilar names in the village olection war, we would re- Sometimes a sing! tfully adviee our Fr and Mrs. Robert Lioyd,|4 gyi) very highly res a ge. have thelr bh day than all the res r pt as intelligen Therefore, to say squabble ¢ (ve wear Ate ound View | mene Very little, pair who have successfully jonly half your numb the News, being a lived twice as long a nay that the : ay tak he It is probably it (xX, ¥) taken up the With Miva and Sat THE In order t citizens alwaya are, in the village | nd wife, who must be routine Hea € clothes to be mended, thi the same furniture to THE MELANCHOLY MUSE day, in downtown office building. jto be run, the same I saw an old man before a mirror clipping his beard. |pie to be dealt with. He used a pair of shears and clipped and clipped, | But these duties Meanwhile surveying himself critically, 1f they do, there's ‘Twisting and turning his head at every angle, with | Trimming a hair here and there with minute care. be promptly Pondered I, “Why does this old man trim his beard?) * It's what we do Who cares whether his beard is long or short time that Scraggly or even like a hedge or pointed like a/ithe day vandyke? actually Must vanity cling to us ail best Hut the old man clipped on, and with a b sigh, of our |inished, and put the shears in his pocke It |And sighing heavily again, walked out slowly | POMER, are done live chance to lives is during when thelr You need |to be all of our natu days?" our this & great deal the Kilbane-Bi waid: “The « upon the city in which you live, Of wn fight the Cleveland Plain Dealer nifion went to the mat without # protest. He mounted to # crouching ition, and, is Referee Lew Grimson approached to start the count, Johnny leaped to his feet and the truggle.” . While the New York Rvening 1 said New York youngster sent the champion to the for @ nine second count. Kilbane got up weak and| Simpson wabbly, but managed to clinch before Brown could thing myself put over the finishing blow,” | Show | And the New York Journal said: “The champion | — jwent down in a heap. He remained there while the) ‘The Germans 'yeferee counted nine, then | the bell came to his rescue." You need to take step. And each renewed The this table ts int ¥. Simpson? one canvas junti! Germany goes Jugo- Slave w sun rises in the morning. want our attract tourists; not asleey the Greeks, soon be forced its own Quality Counts REV. CHARLES STELZLEP question of how year of average same dishes to be your system or remedied. is actually It is during this period that we have al selves are brought into th to grow in enriched, Yesterday's sunshine | Evidently the way « prize fight comes out depends|ment will not be sufficient for today, past is of value only as it helps you take the new new all the good of the days that are gone. - | Noble Lord--1 say, what a deuce of a muddle|gtores in the Northwest that (hurt)-Certainly er—-except the eggs, my lord!—Passing re considered ot up and stalled till|less and the Bolsheviki are so considered, but wait jbind the United States to levy a! |hoycott, to limit Ite armament to a fixed amount; it may bind the Unit Cee ne cowerink | ed States to submit a difference or ine ry ae jMrateslc! a class of differences to arbitration: | - :| but the only way in whick the Unit. | ax Venice once did; they want) oa states can perform the agreement at Idria, the richest in’ the/is for congress to fulfill the promise | subterranean caves of Postoinal io declare and make war; for con the money of Bnglish| gress to perform the obligation to! they want our superb Dal dunmne Cur fiuerieer thay in| HY7_&_voveets for congress to fix) altogether to admin grace. Even the Huns such a democracy, de- drive them out as these mad tust with demand imperialists covering Jthe contract; and for the president and senate, as the treaty-making | power, to formulate the issues to be! itrated and agree with the oppos our From Jugo-s s in the them in Europe; United States, court their brethren.) “When the treaty provides that lastly the Bulgarians, | the obligation arises upon a b to drive the ultimate|of a covenant, and does not make | races—that ts, imperialistic|the question of the breach confines. Italy wishes to/clusively determinable ‘i ny than one million of our people.|or tribunal, then it is congress | |itwelf to decide in good faith wheth- | er or not the breach of the jenant upon which the obligation has in fact occurred, and | finding that, it has to perform the obligation, ‘These plain lmitation upon the federal treaty-making pow er are known to nations of this co ference, and any treaty of the Unit, ed States is to be construed in the | light of them, an body cov arises, life is measured not by its ality long you stay above much you actually live before ground, je day means more to you than life. You lived more that t of the 364 combined, that you are 50 years old, may Somebody else, who has seen yer of years, may have actually as you true with that most things of our that are merely washed, the same same floors to be swept, » dusted, the same machine goods to be sold, the same peo- lives do not take all of our time. something fundamentally wrong with your job, and it should with our that the margin own, when determines of time—the the duties of how much we change and develop the quality period that men differ most— open, if your life is and nourish: new ways DR, J, R. BINYON Free Examination | on Earth a forward step every day, The step vitalizes and keeps alive HIS: LIMIT ; We are one of the few optical ‘ou can't have grind lenses from start to fin and we are the only one in SEATTLE, ON FIRST AVE. Examination free, by graduate op- tometrist, Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. net 1 ye eee, ween Spring Pho jaid it yourself, my lord, f laid every: terrible and ruth: Bolshevik! Wurf! Wurt! ae Main 1! or reduce armament in accord aor For Pain Headache | Neuralgia ng pation on the character of the} Toothache Earache *) Rheumatism con) Lumbago ‘Tablets & Colds Grippe Influenzal- Colds Stiff Neck Joint Pains Aspiri Adults—Take one or two “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. Proved Safe by Millions! Boxts of 12 tablets—Bottles of 24—Bottles of 100—Also Capsules. Aspirin is the trade mark of Dayer Manufacture of Monoaccticacidester of Salicylicatid American Owned! Are You in Our Neighborhood? We are glad to be of assistance to business men and concerns in our neighborhood because we have a better opportunity, in such cases, to improve our mutual acquaintance. Convenience may bring you here in the first place, but we are confident that our co and good service will keep you here. DAVIDSON'S According to Quality lle and 16c Per Loaf sna femece IT’S DIFFERENT MOTHERS} BREA DI

Other pages from this issue: