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THE SEATTLE STAR-—TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1919. The Seaitle Star 3 On the Issue of higtoy heey: : Americanism There Can the state, NEES Sores Rae bes wie | aoe oe Be No Compromise Is Everybody Happy? Not Quite ” “To the People ;' = oli a - BY DR, FRANK CRANE After the Paris nightmare of censorships, secret meet- . : Copyright, 1 by Vrank Crane ) ings, diplomacy desperately adrift, like a frail skiff on . Ss F< Stormy waters, and the common world agape and wonder- T - So the Poor Little Rich Boy was run over {doom as if it were the penalty of being ing, in its common way, “who said democracy?” here is a < TH ‘ by an automobile and killed! | rich. The little boy, and his parents, were Proposition that sounds like the real thing! The president - AT KID WITH 4 The hearts of all of us go out in sym-|not to blame for their money. It was @mnounces he will take his case—the case for the league A SPOON JUST pathy to the bereaved parents. People do| Wished on them. Mations; the case for a peace with at least the odor of - YE f not lose their capacity to suffer because 3ut the thing we can learn to our ad- 14 points about it—to the people ‘ i T they are rich. vaniage ra Lr e cg! iz life, bed oe | Wilson means he will take the stump in population ongees ts é | fullness of life, depends not upon @nd industrial centers, and endeavor, thru the good will mate it pripaedesd RP ined patfietic. ba fensive but on its offensive forces. of the plain everyday Americans who hear him, to bring session of all those things that his hun- It is not the people who take care of them- th pressure to bear upon the senate that they will t dred million fellow countrymeh imagine selves that are healthiest. Those people ced to ratify the treaty as written, And we say: that's would make anybody happy, yet whose life | CTowd the sanitariums. The most vigorous ° It ees Dt ines ait het was cut off as cruelly and suddenly as if mr cee that never think of themselves ‘ won touows nis announced course, § feck he had been a washerwoman’s son. ~~ < ‘4 a lim as he can be in this matter, here is w He lived in a home in a hundred-aere Pe FF ede : sates fete men’s bodi A The treaty itself, and the league covenant, will be f : 3 / ract enclosed in a steel fence, He ha It is natural for parents to wish to shiel oly aired. Folks will know jose where they stand on < : GAAGUE Qn guards about him all day. At night a guard | ¢),0)- children Pas estoel It is commend- Band why. If they are for the Wilsonian principles, they y\ Pr e AS i J at by his bed. : SvPe able, Yet danger is our best teacher. Temp- vill write to their senators and tell them so. If they want | a 7 SS 0/7 He had five mansions to live in. He had | tation is indispensable, if there is to be he league they will get it, in spite of the private opinions Y e y ID MAY BE a private car, elaborately furnished, to carry | any toughness of fibre in our virtue, fa legislative body that, from time immemogal, val emg A = < NOURISHING ig to Ng ar wel ol ee whenever Safety deposit vaults are not for the sons — such ions upon reasons of political and party expediency 3 -'« : oe || | Be wan © run awe ay. of women. agen this might eel a Z BUT 1D AIN'D Being fond of animals, he had all sorts|, The boy that has learned to fight, to | The senate, under anti-Wilson leadership, and hostile . fi of pets, Fifty-six Shrépshire sheep were | dodge, to fall on his feet, is safer than the the league, might rush thru approval of a sliced-off) |_ ’ ( REFRESHING!)) | cont to him by express all the way from boy that never goes out in the rain. ; ment of the treaty, leaving out the league covenent . , Rs . Colorado to Bar Harbor. He had a great Difficulties, obstacles and peril are abso- @ ther, but still sufficient to the immediate purpose of a y = flock of white Brahma chickens, besides | lutely essential to muscle, either physical i y Such action, however, would be far from final.| CY J ’ fe ducks and turkeys, a Russian Wolfhound, | or moral. To live is to struggle. Too much Would only mean that the proposed covenant would become | . ; six blooded terriers, two great Danes and | protection is as-deadly as too much danger, incipal issue for the 1920 presidential campaign. And} J half a score of other dogs, and a great We are Vertebrates, not Crustaceans. everyday Americans citizens would still have the say.| . number of ponies. Life is a venture. We can never make party lines sharply drawn, for it, they could elect a) | : . ‘ : €, There was a 200-acre estate at Newport | it, anything else. Nobody can ever be perat; against it, a republican. | ‘ ’ | where he could play, and a playhouse also at | “safe,” if that means secured against Death, Neither eventuality could, nor can, lead to anything in| 7 Bar Harbor. ; All we can do is to be Strong and Unafraid, end but a real public expression on this very Important} ? of 4 / ) | At his Christmas party in 1913 the toys} Death lurks at every corner, is behind riean question, which, the lawyers tell us, we can’t vote| 2 : ( Myr fi ||were estimated to cost $40,000. They in-| every tree, floats in every breeze. The directly because, forsooth, in our well-known constitu-| | y g J ; Wily / cluded a working model of the Gatun locks | mouth of the healthiest is full of disease there is no provision for nation-wide referendums in| Uh Hf on the Panama Canal and a miniature steam | germs. We cannot: wholly antisepticize; ZB 1 gy Hi kind of cases! 2 : Y f, Wt ie ‘ ys uM) | yacht. He owned a special steel automo- | we can only increase our power of resistance, a Ba f fj ce | bile. y | __ Walls and High Towers and Guards and § Austria talks very meekly about the peace terms, 4p eZ } And yet! | Flannel Underwear will save no man. To he ing acquired the habit thru long years of conversa- ‘ Z © tion with Germany. . } met the soldier boy in the trenches. words: f What do we gather from this story? “Only be thou Strong, and of a good Only the ugly-souled will rejoice at his | Courage.” ; When his time came Fate met him as it| us all the eternal command is Joshua’s © Ma Let’s Help Gus The Fruits of Bolshevism Seattle has some mighty fine neighbors. And grood | : =a - pillar pach a sit ghbors help each other out whenever an opportunity, Fi fe, ! Tomorrow WHY RUSSIA STARVES up. Gus Anderson is one of Seattle's neighbors. He grows'| BY 0. B. JOYFUL 5 1672, on the 26m of June, the French, with| The friends of Bolshevism who are in thie country | There is a reference in the decree to “fixed priggs® jes in the Puyallup valley. i A University of Oregon professor tested his stu find it very @iffiewlt to defend the utter failure of | for grain [We need hundreds of pickers,” writes Gus Anderson, |aents on their superstitions. Me found 31 per cent | iy gine miles of Amsterdam. The Dutch opened the | HoWhevism, so far as making living better and fuller | Byt it must be remembered that Lenine has am harvest our bumper raspberry crop this year. If we) “knocked on wood.” and 26 per cent Uunted for four 1 : lated the country to etop the ad| fr the people of Russia is concerne: nounced that the purpose of his government is to is F i vi ya wi teat cloves. Three per cent of the males steer h, cove b n fields and| Russia te starving sue money in such vast tit t t help from Seattle tons of berries will go to waste. Eee ae commen dice “Eas-ane 0 bn ot a h, covering their ow ot eee MRI ide Weiaia, pbk ceuty edie y ch vast quantities that money will ‘obody wants delicious Puyallup raspberries to go tO tne girl students believe in sleeping on wedding cake S ‘wale lown people but aleo fed other nations, ’ ‘ the 25th of June, the wives, children pag entered Utrecht and anced witt become worthless; and that he has gone so far already «cal " that one dollar in Russian money is today worth less , ; Thirteen cent of the le wish on stare.” Two | » of the inhabitants of Charleston were| The death of hundreds of thousands of le by | than four cents, and that the grain owners are pai@ | Furthermore, thousands of Seattle folks would like a|per cent of the males think it's unlucky to wtub one’s | ordered by the Hisities to leave the town. More than |ti@fvation ia something that the civilized w8rld has | by the government in this worthless money. Further+ ‘vacation in the country, and have no objection to mak-|'°* ®t * nt: however, carries a rabbit's foot 1,000 pefsons were exiled by thin decree hp Shere Boy granary of the | M0". it will be noted that the growers of grain are Y, : | ‘ ) n 26th of Ju 5 ow in é ror ; pSiyreng — some spare cash by picking raspberries. The growers ea On the Seth of Jans. J828, sollowing ‘We STA! arid, chews that the faltore of Bolsheviem to deed |Grcvige ser caieaewor anaes ‘coo aa od ny : a No one has any idea that ft will be impossible | defeat at Waterloo, Napoleon thade his farewell ad | ™ Provide for themselves in case the next crop ts @ 4 re payjng pickers more than ever before. They furnish. 70°." acer for William Hohenzotlern, formerly | dress to his army eee failure. a , wood, mattress and water for pickers, too. lor the firm of “Meinself und Gott.” when the case | On the 25th of June, the Archbishop of Paris was THERMOS A amaion.” A man once epneeived the thought of teaching his Those who want to spend the next few weeks picking ot Kater vs. Civiltzation comes to trial mutdered on the barricades during the Revolution of | COMI A (unASCI ne and Sverdioy put | WOFk horses to live without food: but just as he hag! should write to Gus Anderson, Route 1, Box 28, — ee ee ee eeiete mace i ee’ | into effect a decree from which the following is taken: | S¥cceeded in that, they died of starvation. llup. He says he'll distribute any surplus application) And here, friends, ls» Dry July drinking wong: te ie et onces. He was shat down while he| _ TO compel each grain owner to declare the aur | The Bolsheviki are having an identica) expe to other growers. (it was concocted, the song, not the drink, by a | the contandir plus above what is needed to sow the fields and | with regard to the grain growers of Russia: The season begins about July 1 Geughboy in ere ~ ‘ 1874, om the 25th day of June, the Custer mas | ff Personal use . . . and to surrender the same | are forcing these grain growers to produce wit! 5 . | Le De 0, “© =v OS 5 machit A lot of us folks will be over, Mr. Anderson! Pomme 60 terre nacre ckeurred, Gen. George Custer, commanding tre| HMO & week after the publication of this decie | hope of reward: but just as they get thelr mac ‘ . . ° | eer nag Gate government forces during the Sioux Indian war, at on uM e . ° . » We're good neighbors. ~ te there tacked the Indian encampment on the Little Big call upon workmen ap@ peor peasants to. | refuse to work at all. jomme de ter Hane titan, coe nded by Chief Bitting Bull, Thex| unite at once for a merefiess struggle with grain The Bolsheviki have sowed the wind, in remo er ‘ Of course, it t# open to discussion whether the Pervert A Arai iL | boarders: all incentive to labor on the part of the food pro When we have transatlantic air service and some- |adove really is a spud song or a soft drinking | %, MItAKe Custer was nol sinniitee sy avaisemen| TO Gectate all those who have @ surplus of | ducers, and are now reaping the whirlwind in the goes wrong with the dudad, the gallant captain | warbie were surrounded by a large force of Indians ang} Stin and who do not bring it to the collecting | form of starvation. always go down with ship. (pense) completely overwhelm After a battle Insting for] Polets . . . enemies of the people; to turn them pecans a GOT THE Z00'S GOAT three hours, Custer an of his men were mas pra ps the anaes Tribunal, imprison You have heard what happens when the irresistible | sacred. The only thing left alive on the battlefield] ‘eM for not less than 10 years, confiscate their | otis and some others with flimflammsto: | " r ry Ruben- foree meets the immovable body. Then you bave | when the relief arrived was Col. Miles Keogh's horee,| @ntife Property, and drive them out forever from | [AU some fairly adequate mental picture of that Okle | Comanche The horse was cared for and cherish the communes. ’ Why a Carpet? l}homa City 200 collision when goat and buffalo met | unti ite death by the Seventh cavalry To use the armed forces in case resistance is ae head-first. The 200 is advertising for a new goat phe ales shown to the removal of food grains or other food Punishment may hobble along on crutches, but Some farmers are troubled with inflammatory rheu oes 8 a % sins aot and the buffalo hopes ateety wilt anawer the ad. | 9 ; Seat, hele cal products. . gets there hy aud te, ‘ou help clean house this s' ? pause wa No ee —— ‘And if you did, and yours is one of, those old fashioned TheXgovernment has just bought for 20 cents two |} IS THERE A DEVIL? | that has carpets in every room but the kitchen, did|acres of land near Columbus, Ga. And the owner's | # ——_— ~ ana take note of the condition of the floor beneath the|"m™*_D. le Skinner: BY SED Sy, CRASS STM ALe | 2 jutely, you cannot go much on a name. ee ns The devil has been plctured—mostly by cartoonists! 5 (panee) i i lor breakfas have bee y as one who haa horns, hoofs and a spiked tail, and And did you stop to consider what sort of menace to| The one we had for breakfast must ha owt | ns devil probably, tanehe cin. great’. eles. at | thist family health living on top of such a dust formation ae OOuaSE 30, Pe Mra, va Ruppert, of this | ¥leature, because (t pute men off their guard. | 2 Mane _ Now the has @ great deal to say about! } ‘ place, has an Easter egg dated 1829. It is in an sgn i The carpet, the thick-woven, tacked-down carpet, is the|excetient state of preservation the dévil—and we can't ignore him. He ts pictured | t utter abomination of desolation of anything the} (pause) ee ae te eee L t h all home maintains. SUCH 18 JUSTICE IN PHILA. Sy tei atat calc as C ance cae It breaks your back in the spring, no amateur ever! After Charles Salsbury was convicted and sen We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but! t Wi Be one down without wrinkles; wrinkles in the carpet|terced > Philadelphia, Pa., court, the foreman of | against principalities, against powers, against the of 9 cs oat cd tee tal the jury happened to mention to the judge that only | rulers of the darkness of this world, agair tual and in his Christian chara ne of the jurors believed the prisoner guilty | wickedness in places." warned Paul in his| a“ alr es Tt catches dust half the year and gives you hay fever (pause) o the Ephesiar | ; the other half. bh hn Kelly, Hoboken, N. J. says he was mar . the author of sin and sickness. “Why hath : 200 00 It is senseless, expensive and dangerous. Fied to the Indy 0 has caused so much n filled thine heart?” asked Peter of Ananias E e arrested 160 times » the “But I love hit b put it >» the heart ef Jodas | If you can’t have hardwood floors, why paint ‘em and . ~ : NE i seariot to} 1 our conundr contest ol 7 use rag rugs. told the latest judge whom her husba aD | betray Jesu: re told i Sa rag. riddle, f aH bel Pade fat ore ch y, j i ha vel - a , floor,| peared. “She's got the ching habit, your honor,” : e , he bes Kile, featuring Pales' or Boek- We will admit that the well greased hardwood floor, | pear ® bs ra He enters into me cording to the experience staff, received before that date, we will pay ‘ etional wo! * " a te P wh John explained. ef Juda He blinds the cs of men, accordin a . ona a § a W ad SK. s Oo a ie | ordir ° ‘ol © uc adorned by an occasional well oiled skin rug, is not a delight | prong are ia: ial sehaaty = 4 men, according t $100. For the next ten, we will pay $10 each to dad’s feet, homeward coming from lodge initiation; but} psi 18 OLY i , ' st t Now hurry--the time is short. Buy a case of ‘ FY ‘. 7 § § ” a #m: “Influence or power surely! eo beve —C ‘or . 0. better that dad skin a shin than that the entire family fill) i Bod Sei COL ae ees was Ls urely! : the beverage-—call for it wherever you go. vith every variety of germ the year’s dust pil “The costume (for men golfers) shouldbe in keep a ™ “e Kvery drop con s an inspiration. Learn its system with every variety of germ the year’s dust pile with the game, for we feel as we dress, and Be sober and watchful,” is one command, sist how good Palestaff and Bockstaff really are accumulates. a fecl. A good game, in trim and comfort. | the devil and he will flee from you"—proves that and then send in your riddle, § Even tho father had to wear skid chains and pneumatic | abie clothes, gives twice the tonicity of any amount | ! spite his great power he is a coward Ov: wo 2 d re srative, | of Joull ound, or even rambling around the links th ph 1 are cautioned ee * cushions, still the inn ovation ould be found PRR ew hoeen taeathae EuaerTéahion Ast And here 4s another charge: “Put on the whoie| | cal armor of God, so that ye may be able stana| | (Fore!) ee a a ae a ee e able to stand Hemrich Bros. Staff Products Company, E Continued From Last Paragraph: 4 he wiles 1 Seattle, U. 8. A. Producers of Palestaff, x 1, = “at saaie 1 here is the armor Bockstaff, Birchstaff, Applestaft and | “When the jacket is passed to the caddy It is im | “stand, therefore, having your loins girt about with Lifestaff—the drinks that BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE ortant that the vest or sweater be all that it showfd | truth and having on the breastplate of righteous Scsen't cadoy thage ness your feet shod with the preparation of i$ «Ase the gospel of peace. Above all, taking the shield of THIS, INDEED, IS REGRETTABLE faith, wheveuton ye Mb NAL Atle tec Glade an Ge Tut!" cried the cross one, “what a question! CAIRO.(Via Reuter’s Ottawa Agency.)—An of- | fiery darts of the wicked, And take the helmet of digestion i »mmunication received reports several regret. | salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which ts the ible in Cairo and Alexandria yesterday | word of ¢ praying always with all prayer and “Oh,” moaned the woman, round as a thumb, y were probably due to misunderstand: | supplication in rit “Give ms my walst! and the rest will come.” i during the scenes of popular excitement. The i ituation is unchanged—St, John's, Newfoundland, | yg - socloane “famet" cried a youth, “and a crown of ba Daily Star " 9» 5) WN It tAVa And My Name loud on the lps of praise.” Now you know as much about it as you did before THE OLD GARDEN ER SAYS a e uter’s dispatch. ich le en you | %& you read the Reuter’s dispatch, which leay 1 | “Phat climbing roses should be trimmed immediately after they have bloomed., They havo a different habit of growth from the bush roses and therefore must be handled in « different way Cut away a part of the | old wood at the base of the canes. ‘Then put on a = Funny thing happened the other day in London. | good dressing of manure, if you can get it, or —= Prominent scientists » talking about the voice am: | pulverized sheep manure if you must have a substi J “Vaith,” cried the wife, “in whole and part plifier, One said the first successful vacuum valve | tute, Within a few weeks you will have a strong ANY ho And the steadfast beat of a husband-heart,” | would be presented to the queen of Bngland growth of vigorous young shoots which may climb < ; te : | And then the band just happened to play, “Cod | ten or twelve feet in the season, Tie them in plac : d . , “The fire of youth,” said the ancient sage, Bave the King.” aa that peaw and next Sear thes WI Liverena ‘ te 7 oesiit “Phe wine of life and the mind of age.” | see crop of flowers, : = : r An amplifier on one alarm clock would wake up 2 enjoy t “The game!” cried Power, “and the vest of it; leverybody in the city at tho same time, Let the , Dollar cut dollar and wit bite wit.” | daylight savers ponder on that You can always tell a married woman in a restau But, the quitting time whistle will never heed an | "Rt by the way she doesn't talk. But the mother cried, “Whatever the cost— amplifier; we all can hear easily enough, now so ae (oionepaad The laugh of my little one, loved and lost.” And mother will never need an amplifier when she | Money may not buy happiness, but empty pockets (Copyright, 1919, N. HK. A) calls the family to the dinner table beget @ lot of unhappiness recmee fer coe as Repent “the eye (All aboard for the 19th hole.) And I held the sleeve of the passers-by. Less appetite and more % “A hundred yards in eleven fiat, in the same fix oceupled by the man who invented And a keen, lean heart," said the man too fat [the slogan: “As clear as mud!" | (The end.) “Dreams,” aid) the maid, as she looked me thru, | 2192 “Dreams and the making of dreams come true.” | 4 hem °