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co RIAL—_ Sis Censiry—One People é is a letter from a sheep herder, a Dane who has) been to an American school, but who has some ideas patriotisry and citizenship that might well be adopted some much more pretentious folks among us: ter The Star When our president called us into a state of against Germany war to uphold American ideals—we found country badly divided as to the justice of the war. We found a large foreign-born element opposing our entry into the war, though the bulk of these foreigmborn had become citt wens of this country, But they lacked the spirit to become real American citizens. Too many “American” © work to earn a living, and marry citizens think that when they do their 4 raise a family, they have ship, But the real Amertoan Citizen must study our language; learn to ‘write it; read it, speak and become in the habit of using the language of his adopted « lll should study the history of this country; they should what the nation’s ideals are; they should be interested and in every movement for the country’s welfare, politically and ty, so if the time should come when the United States be called upon to uphold the rights and Wherty of tho or if a foreign foe should dispute our rights, that we can united as Americans. FRED JOHNSON. Star believes that the citizen of this-country who! not lay aside his foreign ideals; who will not learn and) le the language of this country; who will not bring his n up exactly as a native born American would; who} ‘not vote, guided solely by national ideals; The Star be- ves that such citizens should not be allowed to remain we hold that no man or woman who will not so} lify for true American citizenship has any right to re- in this country in competition with real Americans. we care not whether this bars the Japs, Germans, Mexicans or any other race, tribe or even class. | | le near wrecked this country because we had not assimrii-} ‘our alien scum; we were keeping alive a dozen distinct and racial ideals in our land, and we discovered that Rdreds of thousands of “American” citizens not only did ‘speak the English language; did not attempt to speak mit were sending their children to schools where they) trained in foreign languages, foreign ideals and the] p of foreign aristocracies. fast as there is rodm in this nation for but one flag, so! re is room for but one language, one speech and one type| | ists in reading foreign. language) who persists in using his alien is no American} the citizen who per AP and re bar ig 7 call in continuing his alien cus’ A } a we are Vetter off without him, whether he be) man, Chinese, Slav, Russian ib thrower, or) tighty bird from the Downing street roost, who is business purposes only. i ea needs al! the business it has for Americans, and t of free entry into our national treasure house for alien looter has been abrogated. pa real American citizen or get out. if men are cattle, drive them back to work as cattle ‘driven. If they are men, consult with them concern- ig the task, the conditions of labor and the wage. “Seems Like a Pipe Dream” clerk checked off thie last box hoisted upon en lit a cigaret. “Geé whiz,” he ejaculated, this time I was going ‘over the top’ with a ee they ned re ~~ came thru alive and the only one e bun cababeh Gosh, when I think about the e a pipe dream!” like a pipe dream to us, too, when we look at the hustling, bustling, happy throngs of the day and then try to recall the strain and the stress fear and trouble of a year ago. ms like dream to think that fat old Hinden- G 80 a tto rm ot m™ fie nm hit ry us. ; seems like a pipe dream to think that we had to put the enormous force we did to lick a bunch of weak- EVERETT TRUE _ and kind of drugs in the preparation. forming drugs. cine of which you know nothing into | cussing the limitations of seif-medica- | |tlon from a different point of view | human belng to select and take his| own medicine, provided he dora so without harm to himself or others. Yet so many changes have taken place since the days when our grand wedding, told the story of bin mar lagses and sulphur am spring medi-| cine, that be followed by disastrous effects improper method of administration, | try was not looking. plex organism, and in order to ef-| the next day sible ill effects, it is eanentially neces AT THE PLACS YOU WERE EMPLOYED BErFoRGS WS HIRED YOU, DID THEY GGT MUCH WORK OVT OF YoUT ——— cation “4 = SAY == S64 | TUSY DID, WELC, Tec SAY THEY GoT: COME OVER To THS Bookocee AND Ger YovR TiMG If! R | D Adally health colamn conducted by the United States Public Health Service "8d Yea BY DIRECTION OF RUPERT BLUE Surgeon-General U. 8. Public Health Service SELF DRUGGING Don't preseribe medicine for your-|nature of the body processes as well if unless you know the amount|as to the nature and composition of the medicants which it Is contemplat Don't take unproven remedies, | ©d_ to uss Don't take polaonous or habit <oncen ba either tm thie In other words, don't pour medl-| prevention of disease, It will be im- Dessivic for him te answer questions of © purely persons! nature, of te prescribe for individual disemars. Ad- ixrouM Arto mprror, body of which you know lenw. These are the vital points in dis that taken by either the ardent | Public Health Service, advocate of household remedies or WASHINGTON, D. C the person who unqualifiedly con: cen Pe c demns all medicines, |SOLDIER ESCAPES It is obviounly the right of every | | BRISTOL, Oct. 31.—W. Whitefield, the veteran Eristol miners’ agent, who recently celebrated hie golden others gave us boneset tea or mo- | riage and how he escaped to be wed “I was in the 98th regiment, sta rn self-drugging may | tioned at Newcastieon-Tyne, and was undergol "C. BY for being absent,” ‘These may be direct as the result said he. “To get to my fiancee harmful agents contained in the house for the wedding I had to scale edicine itself or by reason of an|a wall of the barracks when the sen I walked eight The human body is a highly com-| miles in the night and was married I returned to barracks clently guard Aimeeif against pos-| three days Inter, and there spent my honeymoon—seven days’ pack @rill ry that an Individual medicating| And I had seven days’ pay stopped, mself be thoroly informed as to the too. who turned tail and whined for an armistice at the p first indication that the war would be carried into own country. E when we think of the kaiser and the clown quince six or seven sanctified sons, however many there ‘of them, we can’t recall, it seems like a pipe dream to remember that they were once extremely important old world! it, the kaiser was once important! frowned, the weather clouded up and it e globe, according to the impression his create. And when he smiled, if he ever and registered hallowed joy. r and the clown quince important? as the shipping clerk says, it sure seems like a te dream to remember that they once were! We are told that it may be some time before Wilson ready for duty. There is one consolation. It will be that long before the senate is ready for duty. Starved Dreams all animate creation, mother-love leans forward over @ helpless young, willing to give up life in protecting the ies in its care. dom does it go wrong. And pity is added to the horror which the world views the deed of Mrs. Hazel Luikart, Michigan woman who gave a fatal drug to her two girls, then confessed in her desperate remorse and of saving them. e cannot explain her motives, and certainly no one, by common human standards, can find palliation Fe her. But her life-story sheds light on the dark tangle in her d which brought about the tragedy. Since girlhood! has dreamed, and her dreams have been stifled. Reared a pad Western farm, she has wanted “something § lived, pent up and fretful, in a wayside home, apart rom neighbors but with the murmur of a city in her ears. ‘“ craved the stage, music, lights, gayety—a career! She had too much imagination, her husband says, but lot enough imagination to see the splendid career that ture had given to her. w mind became darkened and twisted under the in- of a poison more deadly, even, than that which Administered to her victims— poison of discontent. The last few years have taught us that the best way meyers 55 napa is to see that everybody gets p eat. Z You can find Europe's me yg eg ore had _ new boundary lines on new place you can find them. world will never submit to dictation—not even to tion of. common sene~ Kenn Your Hair Needs Danderine Save your hair and double its beauty. You can have lots of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don’t let it stay lifeless thin, scraggly or fading. Bring back its color, vigor and vitality Get a 35-cent bottle of delightful ‘“Danderine”’ at any drug o: toilet counter to freshen your scalp; check dandruff and falling Your hair needs stimulating, beautifying ‘“Danderine’ Hurry, Girls hair. to restore its life, color, brightness, abundance. Here Are All the Big Letters SERVICE which is the watchword at the INDEPENDENT TOURISTS GARAGE 2125 Fourth Avenue Elliott 2402 | jplans to transplant the glands fr | place fastened 24 inches of tough and } | fatigued, it being the first time the AMD GETS MARRIED} Shamlock the Sleuth Lost ts the secret form. With all the world athirst, Shar jomploys his talents to find the rr He kne @ ancient ¢ |Ryehiball fad such a again recipe and the chief's muromy lying in the t of Gnashon Inland, into the body |living human, who would thus be |come imbued with knowledge suf clent to reproduce the formula, But the glands are missing, and Bhar lock decides to transplant the glands of « living buman into the mummy |and bring the dead chief back to life |Meanwhile, Shamlock's hated rival, Hub Stooker, the multibillionaire barber, is hurrying toward his apart ment with a bundle. The bundle con. laine glands.) Chapter 15 As Shamiock might have guenned, had he not been certain that Stooker at the bottom of ‘Telliot Jands in Stooker’s bundle nummy of Chief Ryehtball, Stooker, in hin mad anxiety to re- produce the secret formula ahead of | the detective, decided to perform the |necenary surgery himeaelf without consulting a doctor, ‘More—he de leided to transplant the glands in his lown body Seizing @ razor, Stooker slashed a | #aping hole in his throat, yanked out |& couple of feet of gland, and in its withered gland from the neck of the mummy. The effect became at once apparent. Stooker emitted a war whoop, the ancient war-whoop of the old tribe of Cremedementhes which | had not been heard since the Inst of| that brave race stepped on his own whiskers and stumbled into an open volcano pit to his death thousands of years ago. By the time the old chief's gland had begun to function normally in Stooker’s neck, the barber felt the urge of the wild strong within him. He jerked one of the legs off his bed for a war club and dashed out upon the street clad, after the fashion of old Ryehiball himself, in a pocket handkerchief. Fortunately, it was night, when the Seattle police force in asleep, and Stooker was not mo- lemtedf. He dashed out to Lake Bu rien and back and, feeling somewhat gland had pulmated in several thou. . went to his apartment, leep. ther part of the city Sham- comraden, including Mayor Gerald F. Fitscectl, Watt B. Frankerhouse, Josh G. Reeno and | Stim PD. Charleson, were consulting |with Dr, U. B. Cates, the eminent | surgeon “Who will volunteer to give a gland to rejuvenate the mummy of Chief Ryehiball and give it lifer” jonked Shamlock and feil In @ lock and his (The 16th shock of this shocking tale will Be turned on here tomor row) eee At that, you ean hardly blame the plotters for not wanting to kidnap Fatsel. N the lst of November, in 1620, all Jews in England, 16,511 in number, were banished from \the British Isles and their estates were confiscated to the crown. In 1878, on the Ist of November, William Coddington, first governor lof Rhode Island, died. Coddington |had been a colonist of Massachu [netts, but became dinsatiafied with |the ecclesiastical government. He land 170 settlers purchased the terri- jtory of Rhode Island from the In- dians and established a new and |more lberal colony. On the ist «f November, tn 1700, Charles Il, king of Spain, died. |Charles was the last of the ecidest branch of the Austrian royal house! |to reign in’ Spain | In 1756, on the Ist of November, a great earthquake occurred at Lin bon. Practically every building in| the city was destroyed and 50,000) |persons were killed. So great was) the convulsion that It was felt in | Holland and Norway, whore canals ‘and lakes vibrated. The fountains in Tangier were stopped and arti- ficial tides occurred every 15 min utes at Gibraltar On the Ist of November, tn 1760, Joneph Ellicott, engineer and foun- der of Buffalo, N. ¥., was born, In 1766, on the Ist of November, the Stamp Act passed by the Eng lish parliament, went Into force in the American colonies. Bells were tolled and business suspended to manifest the dissatisfaction of the colonists with the unjust taxation On the Ist of November, in 1844, Charles Pidgin, the author and sta- tisticlan, was born, He was the in- ventor of the machine for tabulat ing statistics. ai le The Old Gardener Says In many of the. markets straw berry baskets filled with chives growing in earth may be purchased If these plants are taken home and set in a box or pot in a sunny win dow and kept well watered they will thrive all the winter thru, re: newing themselves as fast as the leaves are picked, They are much liked by many people for flavoring purposes, tasting something like an onion, but being much milder. Chives are perfectly hardy, and when once started may be kept growing in the garden year after year, a few planta being taken up each fall and used to supply t table while the outside garden is buried under the snow early, becau dinarily thin and fine,” Lina Cavalier. "The bry @ rule, is the reverse. ‘The skin thicker and @ tendency, to an faded blonde’s skin otte's olly or sallow com- as in or the bru mercolized wax, Used every night, this will give one an entirely new complexion within about a week's The wax gradually peels off the worn-out surfa skin, with all ita defects, a little eh day, without affecting the delicate underskin in the least, The latter will have the ly beautiful sie, ef youth one may readily lose 10 or 1g plexion, the best remedy ts ordinary |- UNPARDONABLE SIN BY DR. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) ” not understand) may do; hence violence. The trouble between Labor and Capital is fear, Fearing, they hate, fight, curse, lash themselves into unreasoning fury, and get nowhere, The cure of industrial unrest is trust. We must believe in each other. And he that believeth not shall me namned. There is only one thing that can make Bolshevism, the Social and Industrial Revo- lution and all such threatening things dan- gerous, That is, to be afraid of them, Humanity is always going up to possess the Promised Land. It is full of various Philistines, Hivites and Jebusites. It swarms with dragons, monsters and man-eating ghosts. Some are always trembling for the future and viewing with alarm. But ever the command of Destiny is: and of good be The Unpardonable Sin is Fear. Nothing matters much if you are not afraid. The way to see Ghosts is to be afraid of them. The way to come to grief is to be afraid of coming to grief. You can acquire almost any disease, from infantile paralysis to senile decay, by being | afraid of it, And a large proportion of deaths is due to the fear of death. : One minute of fear may cost the lion- tamer his life, Those who cannot manage horses and, don’t like them are they that are afraid of them. Fear not, and the world is yours. Be afraid, and all the king’s horses and the king’s men cannot drag you to all “Only be thou strong, courage.” So shall the Promised Land yours. Now, as Dickens would say, the bearing of this is in its application. To begin at the bottom, the Stock Market | Fear was the weapon of Germany in the: is pushed up by hope and down by fear. | war. By frightfulness she hoped to dismay’ ™ It's not what has happened or what will | us. We won because we would not be scared. — happen that causes panics, it is the fear of And Fear is the bugaboo invoked now what may happen. to cheat the world of its earned peace, The War is a direct product of fear. Because | Fear-mongers in France, in Great Britain, nations fear each other they arm. Because in Japan, in the United States, are clamor they arm they fight. | ing for their own country not to enter into Race prejudice, Negro lynching, Japanese | any world-compact. and Chinese baiting, Anglophobia, Armenian Because they are afraid. massacres, Jewish pogroms, all originate in| But this Nation is Unafraid. a panicky fear that somebody will do gome- We were not Afraid to fight Germany. » thing if we don’t watch out. One race or | We will not be Afraid to trust our Allies AYN ISP Take Tablets without fear, if marked with the safety “Bayer Cross.” FAMOUS DOCTOR TELLS OF PRESIDENT’S MALADY || ~~~ ¥ se Otapatches from Washington ind!) sinus to the nasal cavity. This swell cate that the president's malady has|ing results in occlusion, or stoppage | been diagnosed aa “frontal sinusitis.” |of the drainage canal from the sinus In the following article Dr. Royal 8. | to the nose. Copeland, health commissioner of| When this happens the secre New York City, and specialist in|of the membrane are dammed and opthalmology and otology, tells what| confined in the ainus. The result of frontal sinuniti ) thin filling up of the «jnus is to pro- duce pressure upon the sensitive tis- sue of the sinus. These symptoma are shown by headaches which at times are exceed: |ingly painful, the pain coming about 10 o'clock in the morning, gradually increasing thru the day, until, by late | ~ To get genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” you must look for the safe ty “Bayer Cross” on each package BY DR. ROYAL 8, COPELAND Frontal sinusitis is an inflamma- tion of the lining membrane of the frontal sinus, The frontal sinus is & body cavity in the skull above the bridge of the nose and over the Inner portion of the eye socket. afternoon, it becomes almost unbear The frontal siftus opens into the|able, Ordinarily it disappears in the nanal pasnage. This canal and the|evening, permitting the patient to sinus itself are lined with a mucus |sleep reasonably well, and next day world-famous Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years, and proved safe by millions for Colds, Headache, Earache, Toothache, Ni ralgia, Lumbago, Neuritis, and Pain in general. Proper and safe membrane. it_comer on again. directions are in each unbroken The cause of frontal sinusitis is! ‘These symptoma persist until the | “Bayer” package. 4 found usually in an active cold or in| acute cold is relieved, until the influ-| Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost the chronic catarrhal inflarimation of | enza subsides, or until treatment bas but a few centa Druggists also sell the mucus membrane following influ- enza. The result is to produce a swelling of the mucus membrane in the canal leading from the frontal! escape normally into the nose. been applied to decrease the swelling | larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin 9 of the canal, thus permitting the se-|is the trade mark of Bayer Manu: | cretions confined within the sinus to|facture of Mononceticacidester of — | Saticyleacia. j 4 { ° Here’s where honestly made shoes prove their value; day in and day out, whether it rains or shines, they’re getting hard usage. LOOK FOR THE NAME ‘BONEDRY ON EVERY SOLE We've made the BONE-DRY shoe for hard work—Oak Tan Soles—finest heavy leather— best of workmanship, and if it costs you a little bit more, you get it back many times over in long wear and solid comfort. Stop in at any of the stores listed below and see for yourself the kind of shoe you get when you buy the BONE-DRY. BONE-DRY SHOE MFG. CO. Seattle, Wash. Westerman (both stores) K. K, Tvete, 108 Main 8t. ‘Schermer, 103 First Ay Be Ya 8 tere, L. Bros. (two stores) _ rt “saad Shee CORD te Ch Genie: . Dock Peterson Shoe S ¢ Coy INO Second Avene? Saat Firat Ave BONEDRY Shoe Dressing Preserves Shoes and Leather Egeert 58) from her age, 0 far as a bY & course of th simple treatment, The wax, procur- able at any drug store, is applied like cold cream.—Advertisement,