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PAGE 6 SEATTLE STAR-—-SATURDAY, NOV, lige a a — ———— same Zhe Seattle Star || = ee SST = : ——= = : | alt on the ius of } EDITORIALS mers FEATURES Be vs nism There Can ‘Yo Compromise € months S; year Washing Out 7 r month, $460 for 6 1 per year, Ny carrier, city, llc per week. | | EVERE T TRUE ‘ON : ; By CC ia | WE'LL SAY SO MORNING | MASTER TRUS tly clewr onpebige ry was it a - = to us, As mud! oe aa Jap Business—and Housewives my nes! OF course, Commis was A word or two addressed to those who are thoughtlessly passing up our American tradesmen and patronizing the Japs: SERRE How many white people in Seattle depend on the Jap for ix-cent car ey, ae re. But why val ‘ their living? not make It 6% conte? ‘That would || SULLIVAN AFTER] OUTSIDE! |GUIDING SPIRIT jg How many business houses could last a month with only ty Dad thed ' sal eit fea REDS | YOUNG T. R. the trade of the Japs to rely on? pound of sugar You women, what would you think if your husband should > TF | a 4 start in business, on which the living of the family de iin | There ta, however, some cheer pended, and if a Jap should compete with him and force) — i ——— left, It ins to look as if we him to bankruptcy? | 4 weren't ge to have such a We need to have this brought home to us; to understand coal, coal winter what it may mean to aid these aliens in preference to our own people. Do you women who patronize these Jap stalls know the then it'll be read dirty conditions surrounding these Japs in their every-) | If 1t len't one oad thing, it's an * eae bal i] other Washir hae begun i day life? : : |distribute the 1919 Income tax re i Do you women ever stop to think what they are jabbering turne about you when you are spending your American money on them? Do you realize that the average Jap can live on what you York women have started a carrying t a vanity JEREREGS = & ERUREDE SEEGERS ; 4 e ase, The object aie “TED” } put in the slop pail and support a family of four besides? | 71 MORN ING, TARS:; |veing to color the ot the Do you realize that the amount you think you are saving - JONeSS universe, otherwise known as the : The guiding spirit of i when you buy from a Jap is finally only a few pennies a : >) on ———— EE the American Lefion jg ella 6. See reget Rallies sammie eae an kerio c - oom te JACK SULLIVAN Md voung Theod ; day? oy oo aoe pennies a day to see an Amer Peek-A-Boo, | arracmNe ‘THe ‘sorr vena] YACK SUCEIVAM ‘ jore Roose. i ican make a decent living? TO Wi As head of the cot ; The American does not live like a hog; he tries to raise |S) Rusnena, Wittle pub |] te to combat antl Ameri ; his family decently. I) hed the following notice: “Thin in|] can propaganda, in the SHRAPNEL te ___g| DE. and he is a8 popular The American is clean; he does not ask you to buy carrots Heh Gh Subtio that my wife] Ameriean' Legion COPS | sal | DID you KNow: ||i* "a his father, ae 4 an le ny bed and board without we » the American la " are 6 0 Ri from a crate that two or three dogs have slept in. ! bas Jett my bed and board without uilivan drew up a} page arseacigenct eon ‘ es ee. sour e pian Come on, folks, let’s stop this before it is too late. If a < wilt: now’'te” ites t atl] drastic set of resolutions) fusge, not the English, | : n Legion | | ver-present and hig} white man doesn’t treat you right you can at least have the debts contracted by hn my |] t Clear the country of all rding to ¢ a total membership of | | ow * eee ame” n activition. tions adopted by the un-Amert éver 3,200 members? || At the convention aphiy Alien slackers would be American Legion | That no man who is the American Legion at’ holding @ publ'~ office | | Minneapolis, Ted wosked or is running for pub-||in his shirt sleeves gs! satisfaction of telling him what you think about it, but the| little slant-eyed peddler only hs at you behind your back. | And there is not a Jap alive who doesn’t believe he is Me never owned a bed a board it would have been ha: if I had not earned it mynelf. 1 deported, conscientious) Can you imagine a superior to any white man that ever lived. | sold my property in Florence, Wis,,|] (sectors kept in prison, |Frenchman in the United | | ie oftice can hold an! | help adopt. th Shall we help them get ahead in our country? ae pee yay hig debth. | ARS any « didi: <2. acanellggs orn? Phyo 8 office in the American || (oe ecto ial Sincerely JOE MAGEE the neighbors who worked the most fon stopped, children | stand” and getting away Legion? jeent American program ‘ y, “ se Still he has the nerve to publish suld be educated in 100/ with it? Yet we did it in That the American | | Of that body. ° much @ notice, when he knows he | | Legion ts not a mili —— e—_—_—_— _ =» per cent Americanism and | france. thoes eviuiieticn® That there are|| DO YOU BELONG nearly 1,000 American || ONE OF TH Legion men at the |} University of Wash- ton? hever was or will be able to pay any debts. Mra, Anna Borna—tror River (Mich.) Reporter. eee There was an old geezer named | Kellar "A Believe me, a regular feller When @ friend would drop tn |. For a few minutes’ ehin He'd lead ‘im right straight to the } So much for the business side of it; now for a letter} dealing with the eagerness of certain big corporations to employ Japs, while white men tramp the streets of their! home country looking for a job. And the big corporations | seeking cheap labor were the ones who first brought the| Jap menace to our shores. i Editor The Star: I have been very much interested in| your campaign against the Jap. I heartily agree with you. I have heard that a large company employs Jap section hands. If this is true a little advertising might force this company to change its system. The best thing you have said was: ‘Don’t buy from them) requireme ts for citizen) An interested visitor | Jat the American Legion | Gen. Col ship made more strict. convention wa WORK IS BEGUN lardet, French military at | tache to this country, who TO STAMP OUT (couien't just make out ery what the row waa about |hall, Armory. C WHITE PLAGUE (cn the aciogater cam: | KICK THEM QUT |'#. saiutant, rar WASHINGTON, D. C.|ored to be heard. jand Sailors’ club) As part of the work to] ‘The IMinols delegation, It is to be regretted /Ave. and Checty? i itate disabled sol|led. by Col. Foreman, | that there are no laws by| Seattle Post, Marg didn't want a thing at the | Which such men as those | Mets every We ° . . CONSIDERABLE SYMBOL, The whole wedding was marked by a pleasing simplicity. The oc diers, th ational Tuber. and they can’t stay. J ’ Jecheme was pink and white, and || vrs. se cassion has te, (fonvention, before they | who Assassinated four| jerk Sec A Jap shack will appear deserted, but if you wait a while HOUSEHOLD REMEDIES jwherever ood taste permitted || ar ir got their own state Legion | members of the American | Qui fe aydinnt: you will see the youngsters pour out; a dozen will be huddled | aan " ERT si Ja touch of color was placed.|J *¥n work to help tuber) going strong | Legion ak Conteatia. ‘We. (OasmT an £6 in a shanty that should not hold more than two. That many medicines, such as| dysentery? Pe ee weed he dggenyadirecst their) “When do we eat?” 18] con be dealt. with sum,|City building, © | 7 spirita of peppermint, camphor and A. There 1s no mineral water |*™ ndance, ne predominating health T. B. Bidner, vo-| still the battle cry of some | “6 | And these greedy farmers who rent or sell to the Japs ginger, which are frequently used as| which will cure chronic dysentery, | S0wer® being pink and w car] cational education expert, |of us who find it hard to | marily. lesen Post, No. are going to pay a long price for their present gains. household remedies, fail of their pur-|tho in certain forma of the disease,|"&tlon&. The symbol of love and face the H. C. L. | ‘This menace has nojmue | Otey has been placed in night, at Veterans HOUSEWIFE. | pose, is accounted for by the great | the regular drinking-of water may be | h’ppiness, a large kewple doll, was Finally, of course, it really depends on the housewives eeretiee tm the strength and purity ¥ value The causes ot chreate | Seseent ae errs and — one to Sagal . ot ny of these preparations as | dysentery are varied, and no one Hine | 8d plano.—Sterling (Kaa.) of the city whether the Jap thrives or not. sold in the market. There is consid. of treatment can be recommended | Bulletin Just as it depended on a few big employers whether or lo variation in the strength of Which will be applicable to all the not the Jap would ever get a chance to support himself on|™#ny of the common remedies used | different cases, You ecordingly Department store clerks in Parte dullene | Cleveland is already | place in the United States | 161644 Third ave, ‘B. B. In his program, Bidner|™&king preparations for | and congress should see Marion, adjutant, 16164, has included work among ie toni halbrmmttresie of | that the courts be no/ Third ave, the 6,0¢ eoaiers otilt ts | cA 2 aa pagan tt refuge for it. Those who Lloyd J. Cochran B army camps and suffering h on is . No. 40, meets from the white plague, | bigger every day. It won't | ca Ayer emai pase Dg day night, Old City are i in the household advised to conmilt a reputable phys. have started a atrike—or would you a St. y | this tay ee “ reg i A It is also true that the loss of |cian, have him give you a’thoro ex-|call that a counterstrike? 0,000 discharged from {be long before it includes | ome foreign country and | panard, _ Two things are certain; no American business or COr-|numan energy thru sickness and |amination, and follow his advice eee the army because of the |every service man. Why | come here only to cause poration can live on Jap business. deaths from preventable diseases | an | Harry Nice, the republican canai-|4 1a het tae: whe | not Join up now? trouble and sorrow} ACTI The Jap can only exist here by the tronage of Amer-|om*titute by far the greatest waste “UNCLE S4M, M.D.” will anewer, date fo vernor of M: " lon es were re rom the} Where you see the | h a oh ‘es P y 1304 e Amer of. our present day resources, and| ther te cobe a* mek Maryland, was J grate due to this malady.| american Legion button, | © ones | Be, Caenenne “wate ON icans. rome he. ¥r defeated. Somehow or other the . that it is not general! eclated| & Suen os . n't China has started to solve her Jap problem. that this ef page gg oro to]: prevention dassuen St ‘will bo Son cree eR") “or oe n i a 4 ue car In time we may become as intelligent as John Chinaman. | neglect or ignorance, so far as the! en 7 Sips A table presenting a compilation | BD NI . halen, faa A bel a |from the reports of state chemiats| . & as dll pol das aaa | Let the People Decide It | shows that 3.472 samples of 10 official | . . eee te articles that are widely used as hn teia The association expects | thereyou see a man who | Ut giving them the op-| When be May's) to raise $6,500,000 from |i» doing his duty by his | portunity of squabbling rape th three the sale of Red Cross| job and by his country. | over the matter in court.) < P: duty for Christmas seals and this | ps ah jat all, money will be spent to! mee out, means him anything, but carry out the broad plans should be taken against| some thinking. “It conterspiated to heip the ONE GONE HOME! ns their return, — we disabled former service} ASTORIA, Ore. —The | fruitless mere man |American Legion post of without the action sary to back it. | a i" Foothall, as you may have noted, Bidner has divided his |household remedies, 1 or 38 per i a Astoria has been instru. | WOMEN FORM | ¥, ify lcont, were rejected as adulterated, or is @ game with @ kick in it work into three depart-|mental in obtaining th You say Gar After three attempts to ratify the Peace Treaty, the| (ont, re resctel an adulterated. | | TOMORROW ea ae mente—vooational train-|giecharge of Hanhec Irie. POST | ful about this or that] senate laid it aside, and ended the special session. It i8 | requirements Back to the mines? ing of handicapped men |jof, from the employ ot | | which ought to be DON also recorded that the senate failed to agree on declaring! The preparations included In these fie toe = ay und women, occupational |q packing firm due to his | CHICAGO.—Women who |in these United the war over, treaty or no treaty, in spite of the facts that | tables are more frequently ued as () rear 100, BL, Clonee, (Chamene|_But, an the Jeweler remarked, *1|| therapy for patents in in’ [alien leanings Auring the | corres ne Asthy ans | Pepto ; a ie . a household remedies th on the ure: a de . Clemen: le ol awe pepe ote F tent stitutions and homes, and) , e | Operators are preparing to | s fighting ceased a year ago and the governments we were|iiricns of phesiciann, but. are, |Romanus) died. He was a pupil of Peer tried to conceal my identity | Aline jocal authorities to ie ie pemike the coun- | CPganise a post here, to be | ow it up With a gaeitieg vegrd rem a nevertheless, recognised medicines, o* aul and one of the fathers of|(' .0?s, ° oy, but Pm *)1 puitd hospitals and sana- SA ® | part of the American Le | an of which was to have been expected. The fact sticks |the abuse or misuse of which may |‘e Christian church toria, | gion. out clearer than ever today that our senate is primarily a|'°M4 {0 serious consequences In 1618, on the 234 of Novernber,| —_— | KIRKLAND WANTS | THE WOBBLIES iti rr) a 7 A more energetic and active con-| Richard HMakluyt, a famous English | LEGION POST < - political, not a patriotic, body. Beyond that, no vital ques-|-rct of ai! drues and preparations is|cleric, diplomatist and. geographer, | &*—— ———_———# |103 POSTS IN CHI! over 2 EN Keepy winner} sane 1 > * Over 200 ex. service tion is answered. Ineeded. The deairable and only ef-|died. His work the “Prine | j} The post will be named | the needed able and only ef jee wor on ne incipall The American Legion | men in Kirkland have | after Warren Grimm, one from each and Discover 3 There remain, however, vital questions to be answered [ficient method of control involves|Navigations, Voiages, honesty, knowledge. vigilance and ies of the English Nat bas 103 posts in Chicago, © application for a of the victims of as follows: commem sut of 106 in Cook county. | charter for an East side | C ‘ eal roa ote wtih fy . out o' ‘00k co | e an Ea Centralia murders. Do the American people consider the war ended? fee Bm Neadlaons of th nm sell nian the deeds of the Elizabethar One post has its member. ase of the Legion. Kirkland, Redmond and Veterans’ If so, are the American people for or agai ing it! 077m ship limited to nurses and| Dr. George A. Davis, of | Bellevue will have x , a ainst ending it| Memters of boards of health and| on the 234 of Novembe - pgp ceahdiea iF Redinind. te { an Third ave, with this treaty that their president has offered? Jother state and federal officials en-|rrankiin Pieree, fourteenth pie ; ae ey, ‘ay aa Cu Waneensctemnine | ornate “ seatiee ail ineel “ prosecuting | ; . $ a |trusted with the enforcement of laws Of . “ nove . e + . organization at|thorities in There is only one way to secure a real answer—by Sealaned to Control the purity ang {ant of the United States, was born marines Icion, and Milford Bell, of | its meetings. I.w.w. ] nation-wide referendum. : strength of medicinal products should |St Hillsborough, N- Mt. He was There is only one thing certain—that is, that the people | cal! attention to the destrability of (00). ‘on March 4, 1853,” The are against any delay. And leaving it to the senate means | ?*V!D& ‘howe laws enforced If & way | Kana i hit. ‘ten, Genk ¥ ha © secure for the purchaser drugs o| . not only more delay, but uncertainty, no real answer at all,|tnitorm strength and purity, with a/**® Japan, and the Ostend Mani in the end! 3 ‘ | view of minimizing as much as pon-|feeto were the chief events of hi Let us settle this business once and for all, and settle it| sible the untoward or secondary ef. |S¢ministration : | quickly. It has been stated by senators that with adminis- ~ z ry Le ef aera aie age is ay ty: Ne rabyar | j 5 aes 7 ; Sl tive of whethe hey are used as|the patent fo: aeamton. locus tration support the necessary legislation for a referendum] nonsehod remedy or under the direct |for weaving cloth was Issued can be put thru congress in a week. If that is even approx. | supervision of a competent physictan. | William = Crompton of Tauntor What We Have Done BY DR. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) vealed The armistice was signed and the hostil- ers. imately so, there is no excuse for not having a referendum Mass, This machine made {t possi ities of war ceased over a year ago. Since Ind ri. st i ii SO, s 2 a . ‘ x a: ‘s saa 3 a yea . § ustrial unrest is passing. To say The first move is up to the administration. oom TIONS AND apphidersd ioe fe ereere Jatvionte vetterde! ti | John, can you tell me a|/that time, November 11, 1918, we have had | an industrial revolting. is threat his i ‘an you recommend some min- | cotton fabrics b achinery in place | bir extinet ‘ ” “ouble. care ost i ; ; crt water which will cure chronic |of by hand as had been done for-| Pupil: “Yesum; our canary, The|% deal of trouble, scare and unrest in! veals an ignorance of the genius prese aaah & m an merly leak extindied fit erie and WT? over the re You can-| American people. We will settle this 4 9, °, | On the 244 of November, in 1863,| ee not set ten million men to killing and ravag- trouble, the work i j ice, la’ | ; > 5 ag: | , er will get justice, law The Widow 8 Mites }] i ki vi of Chattandoea ’ Veskt Edward Bok, who quit editing to|ing, and recover from the debauch right | order will be amiainel: The ‘ + SPONSE a Me : : Jeneral Grant, with 60,000 men, op-|enter civil Hfe, says that man who| away. A " | h men, ot t man who | away. decent, fair and square mass of the Amer 1,000 ¢ has made enoug of bu ness to . 7 2 £ . Gee lene ten the teat of bis dasa cheust| But suppose you cease looking at your | ican people are going about their job inte included {retire from the commercial world Sore thumb a bit and think of all the rest | ligently. It can’t be done in a day. | #, in each | and bec ome a alvic aaeet to his com of your Sin mage sg for a moment for- | it can be done, and is being done. get the labor embroglio, the high cost of Between November, 1918, and ohn D, Rockefeller, He evatianunrree eine | poned eral Bragg, And Jesus sat over against the treasury; and beheld how] REV. M. A. trenched "Conteder rey people cast money into the treasury; and many that were! SePieh Santee’ for Tiron And there came a certain poor widow, and she threw in torious, The ¢ engagerr Union army was vic. |™unit nfederates were | Boy, pa, two mites, which made a farthing. | will preach a sermon driven from one position to another | May be able to answer living, the high jinks of the partisan leaders | 1919, the Department of Labor, And He called unto His disciples, and saith unto them,| Sunday morning until they were routed at Mission aliled eager to start something which they may | Division of Conciliation, has handled Verily, I say unto you, That this poor widow hath cast | . entitled, hry: Budge. | Gen, Glenn says the army exami. | Tealize on in the coming election, and think | 1,150 strikes, threatened strikes and 4 Mmriits fan: all they. which fase east into ihe treasure | In 1877, on the 23d of November, | Nations showed 24 per cent of the of what constructive things we have done | outs. This quiet constructive work GOD PROVIDED the Fisheries Commission, appointed |" under the treaty of pace is pono st aft tg priate Ub th » have | been exploited in the newspapers, but it bas For all they did cast in of their abundance; but she of he wrt 1 the idea of a L f artec lez a League of | been going on. H want did cast in all that she had, even all her living. OFFERING arbitrate difference th¢|had the average human experience Nati by far tl ti the f games % % United States and Great Britain, de.|he would raise that to 99 per cent, | Nations, by far the. most important idea, Over a million boys have taken off the” An aged widow, living on a farm of a few acres at| i arpa te it “nh ae f that the Unt Pid Sindh a) : see ede Lets shit a ni welfare of the | khaki and gone back to work. P i Craggy Mountain, N. C., the sole support of four orphan| ene mercer nerey lileges in Newfoundland waters. Pads idea cen i pecrey ayn bet es deraale a de tory. aS The labor difficulties in three noticeable i grandchildren, walked 11 miles to the West End Baptist | SINAI AND | | old a man is,the may become young Seder Ce uce hes Ay from 3,750,000 | cases have been satisfactorily adj 4 eae ot, taleigh, to contribute 30 cents to the Baptist | CALVARY "The Old Gard - again by adopting the right diet. 1 roeaeiartr pat isha ote wold fehor: oe | good offices of the government, to-wit: al ' $15,000, campaign. | ardener doc may know what he is talking | CW rl r e ht back | bi yj rests i if } tere OB ee | NEEDED x sealants About, but well wager that no mat.|from Europe. . 7 coeeaes cal Colcmcth ae ck f Bains hee iis Wolld indn't Rianced sa thGehe ty tive mae Meee Maeda, Rhich GA Gaukl ter how young a mis ts He san frpw| No such army as this ever before existed, | houses of Chicago. . 1900 years, And we believe today that, there are countless | FINE PROGRAMS Aa the larger: tenrepettativesor’ org |e Caesar and Napoleon never heard of such | So sit tight and don't get panicky. “Olt OF SPECIAL MUSIC [IM \tumiiy. "Moreover, they will wo ‘on| tJ ie one darned profiteer after [nuit Mey dine aid ae back te anted only to distraught nerves,” says Secretary Mama maturing wAtil very late in the wea-lancite 1 | profiteer after quit fighting and go back to work, an army | “are playing havoe with our good it json, There comes a time, tho, when |, a ha that did not want war in the first place, | The war has taught us bitterness am@— | You are Cordially pew Ee i ge Sreeten to end their] A New York suttraget declaren the | but went out to fight that war might cease. | hatred and movement by slogans, catch F ; p , but eve ven there are} wo © e have already! Four billi rs’ wor oly be High rates for call money are reported to have caused Invited |likely to be many partly Gevalitied lieu 01 vd ca hago ope c¥ ref Four billion dollars’ worth of war con- phrases and headlines, so that we ‘ ned to Melligently, Good!| tracts have been canceled, trying to work out pore Macey problems by” millions of human beings who will say with us that this| North Carolina widow gave more than all the others who contributed to the $15,000,000 church fund. the recent breaks in the stock market. Wonder why Sprouts on the ‘stalks . r ? f ket, y FIRST | k ¥ can| How are the men coming on re " ans ’ ‘ those interested. do not apply to the Federal courts fo bé waved if the stalks are taken up,| eae | Six hundred million dollars has been real. i i F se b 1 8 for ; : - | passion gram. a infunction fo oredent ny hoowyna Promega itoF fo PRESBYTERIAN roots and all, and’ set in boxes of] xt will be pleasant news to al |e ah the sales of surplus accumulated “This ari aa The moral forees of the wane , . en va cellar. A plan like|readers who are worrled by short-| War supplies. ‘ yr BE agen : ‘ CHURCH this” mater inne to ha ope \ook greta e ahha upp raat édandpdrefinlet cai ak ‘ world have had their victory in war ; \sprouts fo © table © sto ala " 4 hy iv Ss i a ¢ ey work, he Winter, and aproute out ot ce | Wuarens lives: it ie fraction remains, Almost four milli ea will have it also in “peace, wom i million tons | work is the great medicine -God’s |the w and sprouts out of sea:| And Dorchester, Ill, has among Pea son always seem especially pal-|ite residents Louis Blerbyer. We | of shipping has been returned to the United for puzzled, confused, intoxicated, , , some man.” jatable don't know where he finds it States Shipping Board and to private own- P There are 1,832,132 persons who have incomes of over 2,000, not counting the millions who dodged the income ‘tax last year. v venth and Spring