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EVERETT TRUE I WISH SomMeBoDyY WOULD EXPLAIN TO NUST WHAT THIS EDITORIAL— The Belgium of the East “Something about the Korean situation from a Korean mt of Seattle. “Editor The Star: Your paper that stands for justice and [GET 'T hts against the enemies of justice is already noticed | t on the 15th inst. you published an article, “Koreans ogg which was sent by the United Press Square Kd m Tokyo, Japan. “The Miccartnes of such an untrue article injures the If there Were any represen- | s assembled, as stated, at Seoul, and acted as the dis- | said they did, surely they were the hunting dogs of |w@RonG —— A government that nt Koreans to make the world believe that the s do not want independence, but merely home rule, | SAY, LISTEN — THAT'S of Korean independence. WIT WHERS YOU'RE Japanese government. _ “Koreans do want independence. We feel that the perish- of the whole race is the next best thing to independence. do not appeal for home rule, nor do we expect a square from Japan. | “We declared our independence March 1, 1919. As yet power but never courage. : he world may be sure that there is no solution of the in problem except thru absolute independence. appeal to your most worthy paper to give your moral | in our cause for humanity and justice. ciate that your government sacrificed men and money ‘the battlefields of Europe to save human lives from in- Remember, that Korea IS THE BELGIUM OF HE EAST, UNDER THE PRUSSIANIC HEEL OF} ’ “Faithfully yours, YOU'RS NOT Looky FOR INFORMATION NYOU'RE Look, FOR Aan sigs ARQUMOENT “CHUNGSOO OH, “Korean student at the Broadway High School.” pathy with China over the theft of Shan- nearly forgotten Korea, but the story of of Belgium, tho neither, secured satisfaction, or even consideration, japan rea and China. Just now! is interested in arousing Americans so that 50 from now American school boys may not be writing | rs like the above regarding the struggle of Pacific coast | to secure independence from Japanese despots. | you read the Korean declaration of independence? | somewhat lengthy, but it will prove good reading ose in whom the elemental sense of justice has not or been blotted out by a flood of yellow paint. it is. Read it over, then read it again. Jap lovers on this statement from whose country has benevolently penetrated by ‘ the new sym! is gs appealing as the s' peace table. may gobble Ko Rule Number One BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE ‘This ts the faith I bring to you, ‘This is the hymn I sing to you, No matter what you preach, or where you pray; ‘There ia no lasting victory No final valedictory You've got to save your own soul every day, There is no ancient platitude, formal, fearing attitude, il save you from the bumps along the way; No philtre or phylactery Is safe or ratisfactory- You've got to save your own soul every day. are invited to herewith proclaim the independence of Korea and the liberty of; people. We tell it to the world in witness of the equality of | and we,pass it on to our posterity ag their inherent right | this proclaamtion, having back of us 5,000 years of history, We take this step to insure to all time to come, personal liberty in accord with the consciousness of this new era. This is the clear Wading of | principle 6f the present age, the whole huma | It is something that cdnnot be stamped out, or stifled, or Or suppressed by any means. age, when brute force and the spirit of plunder Jong thousands of years to experience with every loss to the right the freedom of thought, every damage done ity lost for a share in the intelligent Nor fs there much security In some remote futurity Sdme dead, dull heaven where pallid angels play What were a mere vacuity Of torpid ambiguity Which did not save ite own soul every ¢ a united loyal people. N the 20th of October, year 69, Cremona, Italy, raided and burned 286 yeare| Wh after ite foundation are to be rectified, If the agony Suture oppression is to be avoided, is to be given a place, if we to deliver our children leave blessing and hap- In 1485, on the 20th of October.) of England was) ‘What cannot our twenty |Mlady was raging in London . in thie day when human truth and right? | After mother has strugsied two | or three hours over first| the cooking for a hungry family, it | noted the disease hot fire to do| symptoms were terminated in death. In 1680, on the 0th of October,! Antoinette de la Porte Bourignon, « died at the age of 64. She wae #0 hideously deformed that at her birth a consultation was held to determine whether or not she should be stifled as a monster She displayed extraordinary mental powers at an early age and became @ traveling preacher our ancestors ag a colony of their French writer, and bringing us under their heel. fault with Japan's lack of fairness the principles on which her state reprimand ourselves, need not spend with others; neither need we, who require #0 ure, spend useless hours over what is past settling up of this house of ours or what has cagsed its to clear the future of defects in accord with the earnest with bitterness or resentment the treaty of Ryswick, Holland, was signed. This treaty, made between government, dominated as it is|France and England, lon which thinks to run counter to reason and| William's war, the first Intercoloniat | "* «Mfg. change, act honestly and in accord with the|war in America Her works fit) on the 35ih of October, When James 11} lof England was deposed, William of| i, roa annexation, brought about without any conference with | Orange the Japanese, indifferent to us, use every kind|made joint sovereigns of England. | cev and by a false set of figures show a profit and/The king of France took up the| wo peoples most untrue, digging a trench of ever- tment deeper and deeper the farther they go. way of enlightened courage to be to correct the evils ways that are sincere, and by true sympathy and friendly world in which the two peoples will nt when there *P nuat be looked i, water brash, ete, French, aided by the Indians, waged | *tomach, be b ble means as Stu a war in America against the Eng art's Dyspepsia omach with soft food ted stuff merely tnvit John Adams, second president of|* the United States, He was a leader in| American inde ene nat your little po lorce twenty millions of resentful Koreans will mean watihet? aisha teak peace forever for this part of the Far East, but also will the ever-growing suspicion of four hundred millions of Chinese— whom depends the danger or safety of the Far East—besides strength- the hatred of Japan. From this all the rest of the East will suffer. Korean independence will mean not only daily life and happiness for , but also it would mean Japan’s departure from an evil way and exalta- @n to the place of true protector of the East, #0 that China, too, even in ) @reams, would put all fear of Japan aside. This thought comes from ‘Minor resentment, but from a large hope for the future welfare and plate of beans and a pi with cheese for lunch, « day with # réal dinner, instead of a bow! of bread and m meal with « Stuart's f t and get right back the movement from Harvard in 1753 and rapidly became the leading lawyer 1783, he was one of the commission jers who signed the peace treaty of| Paris, Two years later he was ap- practical relief and help which liom in the selec will find Stuart’ epsia Tablets on anie at any drug nited States and Can- ada, as they are considered the atand-bys by the drugmls “A new era wakes before our eyes, the old world of force is gone, and Out of the experience this light on life's affairs. The insects and snow of winter awake at this same time with the and the soft light of the sun upon them. day of the restoration of all things on the full tide of which We desire a full measure of sutix- way of liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and an oppor- | to develop what is in us for the glory of our people. “We awake now from the old world with its darkened conditions in full mination and one heart and one mind, with right on our side, along the forces of nature, to a new life. ds and ten thousand generations aid us from within and all the of the world aid us from without, and let the day we take hold In this hope we go forward. THREE ITEMS OF AGREEMENT “1. This work of ours is in behalf of truth, religion and life, under- at the request of our people, in order to make known their de#ire Mberty. Let no violence be doné to anyone. “2, Let those who follow us, every man, all the time, ever; ‘with gladness this same mind. “3. Let all things be done decently and in order, so that our be- to the very end may be honorable and upright.” United States to England. Washington having declined a third) nominated for ind truth is here. president and elected. , without delay or fear. May all the ancestors to the the day of our attainment. THE TIME TO START SAVING is NOW—make a beginning today — just ONE DOLLAR will give you a start in this Mutual Savings Society Here your savings are Safe and are invested so that you will participate in the earnings: 6% on Savings is a record that we have maintained for the past Eighteen years. Our establishment dates from 1901, and our present resources are more than Three anda half Million Dollars PUGET SOUND SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION Where Pike Street Crosses Third Germany can’t control tr can’t control troops in A troops at Fiume. All of us find it hard to control our tempers when dealing with a man we can lick. 3 on the Baltic; Turkey ‘imor; Italy can’t control It is a safe bet that every time Adam came i the field hot, tired and hakore w gogh Be der grouch by making nasty, insinuating remarks about apple episode , he relieved a siz-cylin- Underwood demands immediate action on the treaty, onthe ground that every senator now knows how he is to vote. Isn’t that too sensible to be statesman- has been said that can be said on every declares Colonel House. Tell it to the SHAMLOCK THE SLEUTH (By nope» wrest from Hob Stooker, multt billionaire barber, hi reelpe for te | tis country who has the right idea on how | |to cure the Labor Unrest? perfect basement beveragy, Sham lock and party visit the tomb of the where an} ‘ ‘ jconspicuously one. some one who is erazy about it, who ele- vates it to be the chief aim of his life. lancient Chief Ityehiball, identical recipe is reported buried The recipe is gone, They dash back to the yacht Holeinthewater. In the party are Mayor Gerald B. Fite cecil, Stim D, Charleson, Watt B Frankenhouse and Josh G. Reene.) Chapter 13 Shamlock ordered. full speed ahead and rushed into the yacht’s brig, where Stooker lay, still mandcled “Surnd up and give us the recipe verbally!” commanded the great de tective. “No!” Btooker yelled back. . “Take him out, men, |him walk the plank.” Five minutes later, with hia Ips | sealed and bis secret still hin own. Stooker calmly walked the plank and wank beneath the waters of Telliot bay: it Was nearly morning when the yacht reached Seattle, Shamlock sprang upon the dock, telling the others to wait for him. He re turned with Dr, 1B. U. Cates “Back to Gnashon island,” yelled Shamlock to his yachtamen, «and again the trim vessel got under way “You know the necret of this| new gland discovery?’ Shamlock at length inquired of Dr, Cates “1 do,” admitted the doctor “Enough,” sald Shamlock, “You ‘will remove the glands from the mummy of Chief Ryebiball, who [knew the recipe for the mont per- fect* basement beverage on earth Then you will place the glands in the body of a living human. Do you see my point?” “Ab!” ehorused the notables aboard the yacht. “The glands of the old jehiet will imbue the living human} | with ability and impulse to reproduce | the perfect beverage and—’ “Pexactly, gentlemen,” declared the detective shall have the secret in epite of our late friend, Hub Stooker. Victory |aball be o at lant ¢ yacht groufided on the beach at Gnashon i#land, those aboard little knew that Stooker, once in the water, had unbound himself and swam the island ahead of them, to (The 14th and most fiction will be chanted here tomor- row.) eee Kidnapers who planned to ransom | Edsel Ford for $250,000 finally gave jit up. We should think so! Who | for instance, would give $260,000 fo | Wdwet? | see In China Perhaps you have heard the expres sion, “Tin Lizale,” which is often ap piled facetiously to a popular make of automobile manufactured in Mich-| Fotled in an attempt to jin the Public Schools. iteach it by practice, by constant drill, from the kindergarten up to the senior class fn the university. et } not an absolute monarchy, such as most | schools now are; to make each school a little And’ make | United States instead of a little Germany. | |to govern themselves, how to get what is needed for the Common Good. to know the ways of Democracy. |there is almost entire reliance upon the de- ceptive, labor-saving devices of autocracy. year, trained in voting, in law-making, in the art of getting what they want by in- telligent politics, we would put an end to the pestiferous agitators who seek to get what they want by revolution and violence. | orderly revolution. | “And in a few hours we children in attaining normal, health- ful cording to @ recent extensive sur- fearsome vey in population centers conduct-| provement ts canto of this galloping tale of rabid|ed by health service laminations conducted by the draft boards indicate that a considerable defects of children. ~ BY DR. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) Do you know that there is one man in Of course, there are others, but there is Every great, idea needs | it in a minute. This man is Wilson L, Gill. And his Big Idea is to teach Democracy askew. Not to teach it from text-books, but to That is, to make a Republic of the school, | What children ought to be taught is how They need Now, | joke. If we sent out our hordes of youth every The Only Way children learn this than that they learn meekly to obey or violently to rebel, This strike trouble has been growing for a hundred years; you are not going to cure You cannot heal the trouble by any act of Congress, nor by Laws, nor by Policemen. No, nor by Argument. argue with people whose whole education is For you cannot The only way to accomplish a real and lasting reform lies thru the school house. Train children in Democracy! Make every school a little Republic, with daily constant exercise in self-government. Only this will clean the dirt from Politics. Only this will keep the doors always open to progress, so that no class of the dis- contented will have to smash them in, Without Democracy in the schoolroom, © Democracy in the House and Senate is a — Unless you begin at the age of seven you | cannot make people when they are grown take an interest in honest city government or clean public service. The only way to eliminate the “easy Boss” is by beginning in the schoolroom. A good dea! of our belief in Dem like our belief in Christianity, a elie ot Democracy is the art of peaceful and | the lips, not of the heart. It is the art of Growth. It is the science of Orderly Change. It is a hundred times more essential that themselves. We will never show we really believe that the people can govern themselves until we believe that the children can govern BY DIRECTION OF RUPERT BLUE Surgeon-General U. 8. Public Health Service sometimes lose the sense of smell to manhood, ac-|and hearing. Following adequate treatment im- marked, The child the United States public) begins to regain the lost weight, acquires a healthy color and very {noon is the normal person nature intended it to be, The public health service book- development Tho results of the medical ex- prevention of disease, It will be im- possible for him to answer questions Adenoids may be prevented, or of @ purely personal mature, or to igan. In Shanghai, tho, they're not |Cured after development. As one of| peracribe for individual diseases. Tin Lizgies. ‘They're “Iron Mules.” | !t# contributions to improve the na- 4 Europeans in the Orient are becom.| tion's health and strengthen its ee a ing affifeted with the Oriental’ un paragraph in the North China Daily *¢hool authorities, News of Shanghai the News remarks Quite casually y in the Sun 1 quite unconcernedly junhampered by any bathing gar ment.” And this is merely a side re mark in the account of a boy's drown ing there Russians are Bolsheviki And listen: Liuanchau has a city ordinance | traffic! eee John W has one blue eye and only human with rainbow lamps Registered Denstist Out of the high rent district, per- sonal service and modere ing enable me te make you Ge te any dentist, get his prices, then come to me and get 20 per cent cnt from his figure, with careful, painlers methods end pereona! attention. Dr. J. Brown's New Office ORPHEUM BUILDING Third and Madicon, ard, fair buildings. Price $5,500; half cash. 607 Alaska Bldg. manhood the conventional (to Western eyes} bath-| has prepared @ booklet on adenoids ing customs, adcording to another! for Appearance of adenoids may be de- ected by the latired mouth-breath- ing of the child, particularly while | sleeping by the river bank, entering the water ‘hat we should b nose, & provision by which the air thus breathed Is purified and warm- | ed before entering the lungs, it ts/ jevident (Nope, there's nothing to indicate |*ults in impurities getting in alr passages. alone ans, both mate ¢ regulating wheelharrow | Ot wi Swineford of Selinsgrove.| one |Pa., |brown eye, being, we are told, the |'# another result | protrude, are crowded out of shape | _land become a fertile field for the dev ‘Doctors Recommend seribe remedy troubles wight guarantee by all druggists. ONE OF THE BEST LITTLE. ° Fruit and Alfalfa Ranches IN GRANT COUNTY, WASH. Thirty acres all fenced with rabbit fence, 9 acres bearing apples coming 6 years old, 5 acres in alfalfa which produced 85 tons of hay this year, A No. 1 pumping plant, fuel oil burner, throws 200 gallons per minute, 77-foot lift. Price $6,500. FIVE ACRES > RICHMOND BEACH All in the highest state of cultivation, bearing orch- Will give possession at once. Double Flat Building NORTH BROADWAY DISTRICT Rents for $75 per month; fine lake view. Owner lives in lower flat and could give possession at once. Price $10,000. Some terms, Might consider part trade. Call, Write or Phone J. R. PRIGMORE Phone Main 3762 ih Bervies, WASHINGTON, D.C. public health service distribution to parents and} It's as cowardly to speak ill of a It tel the parents pbtbaigr og ous to say it to his face. | A dally health column conducted by the United States Public Health Service| ADENOIDS Adenoids are handicapping more|children suffer from frequent colds, than 10 per cent of the American|develop chronic nasi catarrh and| proportion of the defects there dix-|let “Adenoids” wig be mailed to cove re unquestion due to|any parent, or teacher, sending a| the fatiure rent« pay proper request to the bureau in Washing-| attention to the physteal defects in | ton. | young children. Excluding defec- jtive teeth, experience thruout the country shows that adenoids are) 4, among the most frequent physical | 7 | the ‘scalp. | buy Bolét's reach pas- how the first |™&n behind his back as It is danger-|try, Uptown, 1414 34 Ave; down LET “DANDERINE” SAVE. YOUR HAIR Get rid of every bit of that ugly dandruff and stop falling hair To stop falling hair at once rid the scalp of every particle dandruff, get a small bottle “Danderine” at anys drug or counter for a few cents, pour a Ue in youg hand and rub well After several applica- tions all dandruff usually goes hair stops coming out. Every in your head soon shows new vigor, brightness, thickness more color. Let's go town, 913 24 Ave. Since nature intended | the thru the! that mouth-breathing re-| to the} The dangers of this are many, but there are often grave ones, The child | enoida is simost invartably | ht, bollow chésted and| » shouldered, due to the la-/| 1 breathing. or th Facial deformity | The upper teeth| BY RUBBING WITH LINI- MENTS AND OINT- MENTS pent of Riggs disease, The} If you are one of the many RHEUMATISM CAN NOT BE Bon-Opto for the Eyes | thousand victims of torturing Rheumatism, make up your Physicians and eye epecialists pre Bon-Opto as a safe home in the treatment of eye and to strengthen eye- Sold under money -refund jabandon your efforts to rub the disease away with lini- local applications. Such treat- jment by itself is not only ‘but is a wastelof time, during which the disease is getting a ‘firmer hold on your system. | Rheumatism is a stubborn disease. It is not on the sur- face, therefore you must not expect to be able to cure it |with remedies applied to the surface. No one ever yet ef- fected a permanent cure in this way, so why should you continue to suffer while rely- ing upon treatment that has failed in thousands of cases? The experience of others af- flicted with Rheumatism your best guide, and by fol- lowing their advice you can not only save yourself untold suffering, but rid yourself of a disease that will eventually wreck your body and leave you helpless. Almost every victim of Rheumatism has practically the same experi- ence.. They are so impressed |with the pains and suffering jof the disease and are so anx- jious to get rid of them that they have treated the pains alone, and overlooked their cause, They have rubbed with liniments, lotions and oint- ments in an effort to get tem- porary relief, with no chance of doing themselves any per- manent good. Such was the experience of Mr. Caspus Bibb, of 2424 {Tenth Avenue, Bessemer, Ala., who writes to tell how he found relief from this ter- rible affliction, He says: . ‘mind today that you will] _|ments, lotions, ointments, and |‘ is} | treatment, therefore, is and almost every oven has you will be given complete pany, 405 Swift’ Laborate Atlanta, Ga. RED w yea s2, I muffered from a severe attack of articular «Kheumatism that rendered me almost helpless. By the use of the usual external remedies I. was able to check the pain somewhat, but did not rae the full use of my, limbs, iJ on cloudy days or when ¢: to dampness or cold I would im- mediately suffer from stiff and aching joints. I began to take 8. 8 8. and all symptoms once began to disappear, unt now I have no fear of exposure to the worst sort of weather, 1 feel it my duty to S. 8. 8. to all who wish to free ves from the torturing of Rheumatism.” Physicians now agree that — many forms of Rheumatism are caused by a germ in the blood. The pain i : futile and devoid of results, ease itself, but poe symptom—Nature’s warning © to you that you have been at- tacked. The only intelligent through the blood; treatment directed toward eliminating the disease germ from blood. For years nearly all the prescriptions used by the — medical profession were those containing iodide of potash or | mercurial substances, but in nearly every case these min- erals are more injurious to — rae than the disease it- self. ‘ One reason why S. S. S. is so successful in the trea‘ ie of Rheumatism and other blood disorders is the fact that it is a purely vegetable — remedy, being made from roots and herbs gathered di- rect from the forests. It cons tains not a particle of mineral ” substance, and acts by ee impu- disease germs from the and cleansing it of all rities. S. S. S. has been on the market for fifty years, sold it ever since he has been in business. It is sold under an absolute guarantee that it pores vegetable. Jur medical department is} maintained for the benefit of the afflicted, and if you write fully about your vice as to the treatment nec sary for your individual c for which no charge is Address Swift Specific Con les