The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 17, 1919, Page 6

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D 4 More Light on Japan ITORIAL—_ ’ Here are two letters from informed residents of Seattle Mealing with the Japanese at home and abroad; or, rather, ling with him at his home in Japan and his home on the ic Coast : Editor The Star: “stand you have taken on behalf of Americans as opposed to the Jap menace. T came ‘here from the East a short time ago with the in tention of going to work in one of the hotels here, but to surprise I found that in all the first class hotels here ey employed Jap bellboys. . = JT have been a bellman for ten years, and have worked in © Many of the leading hotels in the country, and this is the first time that I was ever refused a job because I was an “American instead of a Jap. It is certainly a fine welcome for the returning boys from There, who fotight to save this country for all of us, ask for a job back home and have the employing clerk ' but the management only ‘ , as he did to me: “Sorry, ws Japs here.” eep up the good work and maybe in a few years you be able to load a few ships with Japs and their white and start them on a no-stop trip back “home.” AN AMERICAN. litor The Star: Much has been said on this Japanese tion and much has not been said. fe have all heard about Kofea, Dut little is known in this antry of the true facts. Korean authority I know that Japan has ty of slaughtering Koreans “by the thousand. S are not Japanese nor Chinese, and they hate t! nese. Korea has a history dating back 8,000 years be- that of Japan. ; a has a. population of about 20,000,000 but of all millions few can escape the country because Japan passports to Koreans. ; " Japs will get this country just as they did Korea. they come one by one and gradually get hold of things. thé Koreans are Christians, and when they came to the Japanese burned their churches. e who really want something to pray for, pray for Yours truly, been HENRY W. WHEELER. ly civilization cannot save Korea from the clutch 3 ; perhaps even hapless China will be swallowed;) ‘certainly Americans can see to it that the aggressive omniverous Jap does not drive us from our heritage |make of the Pacific Coast a Japanese dependency. d until The Star is sure that the Jap has retired for-| ‘tothe proper sphere of his improper influence, here is) “paper that will, in season and out, oppose the Jap in-| | of this country. . question will never be settled until it is settled right, | by barring from our shores indigestible aliens FOR-| | } you with us? of the treaty has done one good thing. It fi Senators an opportunity to air their views con- everything in the world except the treaty. ‘a reminder that the school election. will soon be us. tion should be non+partisan it is this one. The r ee children should not be governed by parti- i er ities. at reason that The Star supports the candi- ‘alter Santmyer and George H. Walker. Both of men ‘aré broadminded citizens, owing allegiance to no i i clique or . Mr. Santmyer has on the schoo] board during the past year—and there a word of criticism of that service. Mr. Walker has a leader of progressive thought here for many years. public service is to be congratulated that two such | are willing to assume the burdens of office. You can’t always tell. Just as soon as Chaloner won b his status as a sane man, he decided to go on the Small Town Advantages 4 National Social Unit Organization has found that cent of the business leaders in cities come from small purpose of the organization is to make every city ock into a separate community, its members working for the common good. movement turns city folk into neighbors. A families seldom mingle as they do in villages. City nt and public affairs generally are remote and ng to the average household. Ward and precinct poli- give only a few—and those not always the most desir- n opportunity to display-leadership. " Any plan which will enable the city dwellers—the busy re-€: and his busy wife—to feel th&t they are a part municipal organism and that their public services are , certainly will improve citizenship. | | | ee Ci ge Peanuts f _ Once upon a time peanuts mainly were used for recrea- purposes, when one went to the circus, or the county Nobody knew whence they came, nor why, but we know that they came in shells and half the fun of ting them was in the cracking of the shells and littering ‘up the place with them. It is different now.: The peanut has come into its own. days the roasted peanut end of the business is nfi imal. The big peanut money lies in the fattening } poge and cattle. The peanut plant makes excellent hay, oil is a fine substitute for olive oil. ' Agricultural experts predict that within the next decade peanut will rank with the other major crops, wheat, and cotton. Already, 3,000,000 acres are sown to nuts, and the annual crop is near $60,000,000. nd goober farmers are getting rich on the once lowly oe _ When an under-paid preacher reads that a laborer can’t live on his $6 a day, he is almost tempted to say « ‘ad What the country needs most is a repeal of the law of _ stand and deliver. A boob is one who is astonished by the revelation of graft in the construction of camps. A wise guy is one who is astonished by the fact that there was no more of it. There is a general s vi ion that a retail price of cents £ pound would relieve the sugar shortage ina few} , A few words of appreciation for the | | | | 40 I {EVERETT TRUE Yes, t KNOW IT ee a = en a “BUT” it ou HAD WORKED HALE AS HARD PUTTING. THROUGH ‘THOS ‘You HAVE AT PIX YOURSG Ure LD PAT YOU ON THE Gack # a eteeel ————} “HEADACHE” Next time you > & headache, , jand are tempted t by « canily you might stu@ying the aned “ANd co: a in which head ache is t aymptom | Typ | Malaria Mont lsifectious diseases of severe | type, auch as smallpox, at onset. Moningitia Anemia. Brights disease. Heart discase Growths within the skull Apoplexy (an advanc “Migraine.” Acute or chronic sinusitis. Defective vision Gas poisoning Autointoxica tion. t Chronic abdominal diseases involv ing the organs of digestion. Better | consult a doctor and get at the cause of the trouble. It's heaps better “Autointoxication.” resulting from the above or arising from faults of | diet | Chronic metallic polsoning, as with | lead Defective vision. Inflammatory nose Ear disease Headache ts algo frequently ob- served In connection with various brain | diseases. In women with diseases of the re productive organs © symptom). | | condition of the PROMISED To AVPPORT SR TAW REForMs BSProee © WAS ScSec ran = rT THR SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1919 md | WE'LL SAY SO A MINT » WIVES Listen, wives! Mra, Sam Newly wed was the kindest young wife in the world, She adored having Sam amoke in the parlor, she left him t any night he w an she idered it only kind te wo, or kicked: ne It wouldn't be kind — when he uncomplainingly aceepted a cold dinner, and all that wort of thing, In fact, the was go altogether ex traordinarily kind that Sam, in time, began to wonder if she wan too good to be true yon after beginning to wonder about this matyr Sam took to ping around the house at odd nts of the day, such, for tn , as when the jee man came, or when the grocery boy was due (or when the man came to read the gan meter orice, BUT —-... But not @ alngle outoftheway thing did Sam discover until a cer tain day when he casually passed ReMwMRMA AS the house on the shady side of the ING UP AN AUIBI FOR street where he wasn't easily no teeable, and saw a s#trange man SHAKES Rm HAND AND ft Avira, i CAN ONLY run up the atepa to the front door im eaw his wife open the fron throw her arma around the angers neck kiss him fer vently, Sam imm: lowe to hear what was said. You're sight for sore Mra, Newlywed cooed. “I've simply crazy to see you. But you better go back to your hote} now It will be @ kindness for Sam about you first. I hum I had @ brother—I would be a kindness to thought it make him think I was alone in the world and didn't he and bother him.” fut Sam more than to #ee you,” never heard anything I've been simply carzy because, at these words o | | (Copyright, And now evict Mr. 8. Gom Chief, and deposes and says, that it is Prohibition -that is upsetting the U, S. A. He proceeds: “By adopting Prohibition we have | willing to spend millions more in defeating chanced the wrecking of the social and | the expr ed will of the people-—the idea economic fabrie of the Nation. | of these apostles accusing the preachers, “We have invaded the habits of the | school teachers, life insurance companies, workingmgn and this is what has hap-| W. C.'T. U. and business men of the country | pened: “We have upset that man, un “Uprooting one habit uproots “I belieye Bolshevism in Russia began in rohibition, : “Powerful as was vodka, in sian found relief from the dull monotony f his life. Without it torment rose before him and he was seized with the | \desire to tear down that which he could | icans employed in and on strike at the | never rebuild. mills, railroad employes, Chamber of Com- “Ig Prohibition worth such a price?” merce members, clothing, furniture, boot Also the London Morning Po jas follows: |haps, be worth while to investigate whether the organizations which are working for me je tell/ revolution and the organization which has never tld) worked for Prohibition have any supporters “We not know whether do lately sneaked| organization which forced Prohibition upon {America had any social or political aim in Vv jew beyond Prohibition, It | in. common,” y of the new bulletin on “Cancer Facts Whith Every Adult Should Know,” just ieeued by the U. 8. Pub became interested in the case. There were rappings, groans and spectral] lic Health Service. appearances, all produced by this ‘ 4 chia But she wasn't bewitched. nor te the folk youngster suffering questions of general Interest relating only to hygieus, smitation and the prevention of disease, It will be impossible for him te answer quge- from anything baffling Kid mischief, that's ajl, getting tremendous delight out of tricking tons of » purely personal matufe, or [a jot of solemn adults Se frrmertve for individent Gemem. | set's hope she doesn't lose her FORMATION EDITOR, Job. e Public Mealth Servicn, eee Washington, D. oll How Wonderful Is Nature IN the 18th of November, in 1247,} Robin Hood, leader of the Sher wood Forest robbers, died. He led| his bands of robbers from the year 1189 until 1247. They met with tt tle opposition. It hag been attempt: | jed to identity Robin Hood with| | Robert, Karl of Huntington, who} was banished from the court of| Richard I }, In 1618, on the 18th of Novem ber, Cortez sailed from Cuba for the jconquest of Mexico with a fleet of ten vessels. On the 18th of November, in 1558, Reginald Pole, an English cardinal, died. He was remarkable both for! his brilliancy and for his integrity He gntered college at the age of 12] and took his degree at 15. As bi refused to sanction the divorce of| Henry VIII. from Catherine of Ara-| gon he was compelled to leave Eng-| land and fled to Italy, On the ac} cession of Mary he returned to Eng land and was restored In 1155, on the 18th of November an earthquake shook the North American coast, damaging houses all along the shore from New Eng Jland “to the Wert Indies, In the harbor of St rtin's the sea with dre ving seln and | the | fish on When harbor bot returned they overflowed the lowlands for miles On the 18th of in 1789, John Elwes, celebrated in England as a miser, died worth $5,000,000.} Elwes, who served for 12 years as a} member of parliament, had a record} Jof being absolutely independent and |incorruptible. His private life waa jdevold not gnly of luxuries bht of jbare necessities, He often subsist ed for a whole day on one egk. In 1804, on the 18th of November, | Philip Schuyler, a general on Wash-| ington’s staff during the Revolution,| died at Albany at the age of 73. | On the 18th of November, in 1840,} the body of Napoleon was exhumed | at St. Helena The ceremony was superintended by the Prince de Join:| d waters | ber | ville, son of Louis Philippe. ‘The| body, which had been embalmed and| was In a good state of preservation, | was n on board a war versel to} France. Esther Devlin and Alice Troskt, two Wilkewsbarre, Pa., girls have ac-| cepted jobs hodcarriers, OTHERS © Reduce your doctor's bills by keeping always on hand— ICK'S R BODYGUARN" ~ 246 ane | ther. The man in the flat next to ours makes a good living by raising what he calls “rubber eel He feeds the common river eel a paste made of conerete and flour and when the eels are like hard rubber he cuts them into proper Sengths and sells them for typewriter and wringer rollers.— Lu “OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF | } BAB | * st “Papa.” said 4yearold Dorothy, “I want to ask you a very important question.” “What ts it dear?” queried her fa oe King Alfonso, says a London din patch, greeted his mother-in-law af. fectionately, kissing her on both cheeks. What a lover that boy must be . o- - “Jennie,” said a North End mother “Why, Herman,” sald the mother |to her 4-year-old daughter, “here's 3 of a precocious 6-yearold, “aren’t| cents; run down to the drug store you ashamed to call auntie ‘stupid’? | 0 the corner and get me a stamped envelope.” A few minutes later Jonnie entered the store, and the proprietor asked: “Well, little girl, what can I do for yout” “If you please, sir,” she replied, “my mamma wants free cents’ worth of stamped antelopes. o. ‘The Craze for Educatfon Young lady wants to learn to milk Will pay beautiful amount Berk Berkeley “Well,” continued the small schem- or, “tomorrow's my birthday, and I'd like to know what you think I'd like to have for @ present.” Go to her at once and tell her you are sorry.” “Auntie.” said tie lottle fellow, a moment later, “I—I'm awfully sorry you are so stupid.” Sunday School Teacher—Now, Ha- zel, can you tell me what the Epis: tles are? Small Hazel—Yes, ma'am; they are the wives of the apostles, * a goat Let's go buy Boldt’s French pag-| for lessons on Saturday p. m 3287 try. Uptown, Advertisement “in town, 913 2d M14 3d axe; down ave. RE you saving anything out of your present income? It may be a struggle but it is more than worth while — hundred of members of this strong Savings-Association are grad- ually building up a. “safety fund” for the future and at the same time their savings are earning regular dividends. For the past Eighteen years we have never paid less than Gx% interest * Resources now over $3,500,000 Puget Sound Savings 2 Loan Association: Where Pike Street Crosses Third The only reason for reprinting here this ny relatives to run in) absurd drivel is to pillory its authors. |* As a matter of fact, the people who put Prohibition over are th as Myron T. Herrick explained in an article e Chure! he had stabbed himeelf to death ——-—----— thinking he had finally found his! r ; wife too good to be true HORDES OF BEARS TRAILS HUSBAND | i pene Fis a Se | HARASS CAMPERS OVERSEAS IN RAGE} BREAKS MY he easiest way in thé world to ruin} |. Byes : “ ig 8 ‘ j perfectty goed buchand! VANCOUVER, B. C.,, Nov, 17--J.| BOSTON, Nov. 11—Mra. George! . ue | McHugh, resident engineer of the| Walter McLerie has reported to her | Pe A rervant girl, 15 years old (her|dominion fisheries, has returned | family here the successful termina: | phat's Dr. King’s wew Dis- name te withheld but we’ imagine|from the headwaters of the Bella) tion é¢ a long journey made for| fe ¥ she has a snub nove and is a movie|Coola fiver after three weeks @line suxe of vengeance. she wan| COVCrs for fifty years a devotee) haw made a large number|the wilderness, fotlowing*the salmon |“ ciate | cold-breaker” of wise men—acientists, pyschic re-[run to the spawning beds to clear married in 1914, but her husband | searchers, etc.—-seem very foolish obstructions from the streams, Mr.|left her tp enlist in the British Noes but sustained quality In the dining room of the rectory|McHugh reparta that thelr camps|army, She heard that he was dead and unfailing effectiveness cas in the Norfolk f Swanton| were frequently disturbed by bears, |but later learned he hed married| arouse such enthusiasm. Nothing Novers large splaal ot of} and|large numbers of which were at-|an English girl. She found hita|but sure relief from stubborn ol QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ater we mysteriodsly appear on| tracted to the stream by the schools| with Mra, MeLerie No 2 stroliing|colds and onrushing new onem QT have been suffering more oF | watis, cetilng or floor Jof salmon in a park, He tw in sail rippe, throattearing coughs, and pain and hn bodbey-at Ghote. heuais exit - — P cous have made De King’s aince my dischar : 2 : ° . ow Discovery the nationally popu not be determined. Min cinta} My lex was cut « 0 : q ‘Wh C ] F d R | f F jar and standard remedy it ts today, examined «the place The < | r. after being wounded in it a what tilda oot, oie wein peeneneast ere Lan in ene rom Fifty yeare old and always relt Thierry. 1 thovght possibly this ally, to tear the house down!| I hi T if ° Ec ” able, ova for the whole family. A might cause tt | t pottie in the medicine cabinet meang : ter day the “oosing” of A should at once consult the |. pull ee Hind bec c ing,- err ying eM AS ihoctiived cold or cough. Oc and nearent al representative of)” Pe" q ts J $1.20. AN druggists. the U " Health Service Finally Gewald Williama, a pro | This Question Is Ever on the who have suffered as you have to ities Jal hich 4 by ti ho fessional magician, volunteered to} guide you to relief matter how H Ine tye" Letatwiint, nadinat cna {eid, Rav, 3. Guy tm solving the} Lips of the Afflicted terrifying the irritation, no matter) Regular Bowels Is Health or an eg problem. | é how unbearable the Bowels that move spasmodically— nical, ne howpital and en It was found that when the| Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, an4/purning of the skin free one day and stubborn the next— a maf’ was absent, the splash terrifying conditions of the promptly reach the sea the trou-| should be healthity regulated by Dr. § Health appear. She was spied upon,|skin are deep-seated blood troubles. bie Give it a fair trial to be con:| King’s New Life Pills. In this way vse and vessels of salty water were|and applications of salves, lotions yinced of its efficacy you keep the impurities of waste | }iett within ber reach and washes can only afford tempo) Gur chief medical adviser is an| matter from circulating through the @ 1 have had ewelling or| It Was found that the splashes/rary without reaching the authority on blood and skin dis-|gystem by cleansing the bowels thor lump tn tree eeeant tor meee Oe OF lwere saline in flavor and finally|real seat of the trouble. But just! orders, and he will take pleasure/ougtly and promoting the proper Se te teh adctthaeates neaamek ten |e OU Gaaaht tn the cst [because local treatment bas done|in giving you such advice as your! flow of bile. inde So a a a eee, confessed. Her only ex-jyou no good, there is no rearon to individual case may need, absolutely} Mild, comfortable, yet always rel Kev ues Oy: ; a nd ae, R |ptanation i» {hat she “must be|despair. You simply have notsought without cost. Write today, descrit-| able, Dr. King’s New Life Pills work ah Re ee = mat te | Bewitched. ” the proper treatment, that is within ing your case to Medical Depart-|with precision without the constipa he teolnatne Sissi, ind ime! In 1762, an if-yearold girl orig-|your reach, ment, Swift Specific Co, 252 Swift|tion results of violent purgatives, inated tho Coekland ghost in Hol-| You have the experience of others|Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. 2be aq usual, at all druggists. eAdress and T nball mail you 8 ie ee ee ee Gammucl Johnaon 43 Z Bul - Prohibition and Unrest BY DR, FRANK CRANE 1919, by Prank Crane) pers, Labor | in the Atlantic Monthly. And the idea of the Saloon Keepers,*the High Rollers, the Politicians, the Distillers and Brewers, who spent millions to prevent Prohibition and are of fomenting rebellion, is pure blatherskit- ism. The Iron Age sent a representative to settled him. others, Pittsburg and had the situation thoroly investigated, The reporter interviewed all it the Rus- | classes, | “Steel mill officials, mayors, sheriffs, and trouble | state, city and town police, soldiers re- cently returned from the other side, Amer- st eructates | and shoe and other tradesmen, restaurant proprietors, as well as priests and ministers, all agreed that prohibition is a blessing. “Not all of them believe in prohibition. | In fact, most of them do not believe in it. But they, nevertheless, feel that at this particular time it is fortunate that prohibi- tion is in force. “The present steel strike will go down in history as one of the greatest struggles between labor and capital the world has ever witnessed. It also will go down in history as lacking in much of the violence usually attending such conflicts because of the enforcement of the national war-time prohibition act.” | | | the secret might, per- } h Members, | { T hanksgi Comes condensed in « bottle in Pineapple JiffyJell. We use the juice of half « Pineapple to flavor a pint dessert Loganberry Juice | Chimes capdeunad in 0 Hel tn Logaubemny, Jiffy-Jell. You get the juice of many berries in a pint dessert Be Sure and Get This Package hebaebebahehteletaetaltaetleteeteleleblelelleteete htt ei. YT =I Each package has a sealed glass bottle of fruit juice, im condensed form. ving Offer One Dessert Free , AReal-Fruit Dessert For Six People This is an offer to buy this week a Jiffy—Jell des. - sert for six people. or Many housewives don’t know what Jiffy-Jell means to pin ee They know the old-style quick desserts, but not the new ‘i Jiffy-Jell brings you real-fruit flavors—not the artificial. Each package contains a bottle of fruit juice condensed. We crush the real feuit, and much of it, to flavor a Ji ba dessert. A Jiffy-Jell dainty seems filled with ere you get fresh-fruit delights. And you get its healthe ful acids, needed every day. Try One Fruit Free Present the couporeto your er this week. Buy ages of pil yg te, and he will’ give — a full-size ot F y elt in Loganberry or Pineapple flavor free. We pay im for the free package. This will give you three packages for the price of two. Jiffy-Jell comes in many re flavors, but the choicest are two pack. Logan! and Pinea ‘ou will each package a bottle of the fruit-juic a ord 8 The Jiffy-Jell mixture acidula proper color. Simply a P i Packs, ¢, then the flavor from the vial, and let cool. Se get —a real-fruit dessert for six people. It will have a wealth of fruit. It will change your whole conception of quick gelatine desserts. Note that this offer is made on two flavors —on Loganberry and Pineapple only. Ypur grocer has no right to offer another. We pep has) to know Jiffy-Jcdl at its best. Then always remember that this real-fruit dainty is ever your command. It will bring you the joys of real frait. fea fe will cost you, wh Tay fe Saty © few, cents per. Gimmes. ne, which we use to make Cut out the coupen new. If yous go to another store. en xa etre less ‘an the fruit This offer is for this week only. dresd Lene Os fants rian Makes a Pint Dessert Like This Full Size Package Free Present This to Your Grocer T heve bong! kage: ht toda: of Jif; 4 Jell pp. grocer and cto ae — of 1 ec one package in Loganberry or Pine- apple flavor, ‘rite your name rese Te the ‘We will pay you in cash your rete!) price for such Of ress psusens wee See reieran ent thee te ast the aad of with your bik ‘ethe ote that it would be a freed on uste deliver or accept any product but Jiffy: on this coupon when we pay the grocer for {t. Waukeche Pure Feed Co., Waukesha, Wis.

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