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4 She Seattle Star By m 3 months $1 H tate ait de per month 50 mths, $ year, $ Washington | Outal be per month \EVERETT TRUE The New Profession They lured him to a waterfront saloon, drugged his Shanghaied him aboard in the dead of night, th into the brig, beat him and fed him on sour bread Water until he was willing to swab the deck. In he became an able seaman, or walked the plank. In a foreign port, one day, he got away. He came back He went to Washington d told his story, which was | Vouched for and amplified by other able seamen. In time i& law was passed that made a felon of the “crimp,” and he and his shangai-joint were blotted out and replaced by the more modern employment office. Humaneness wone * * * * Aboard this merchant ship, and that, was a_ bullet headed brute with iron will and iron fists. His breath ) was fusty with the stench of rum. He bawled his orders #6 a cowering crew and enforced them with a belaying-pin. ‘He was the ship's master. He, too, went the way of the “crimp.” It was part of ‘the transformation that he should go. In his place came kindlier boss, a master who treated his crew like men. le still sails the seas. Humaneness scored again, And w— CURDUING YELLS SOMEONE'S OVER AT HS NSW NEIGHBOR'S } beer, him and time | CALLING FoR HELP ae oe ee Oe The state, with the help of the federal government, has “established a nautical school for young, aspiring men with a desire for seafaring, where they can fit themselves in » two years for the duties of master and mate. They will train on the U. S. S. Vicksburg. Their home will be on Lake Washington in the winter months. In ‘Summer they will cruise to foreign ports. It is announced “This exceptional opportunity is offered young men to quire a valuable profession—” Profession! There you have it. The “yo-ho, bottle-of- cum” period has passed. ‘The professors are going to d our merchant ships. ‘And we'll wager the professors win! And another reason for making the change of wardens at McNeil Island may be that the prison orches- tra was without any Drum until now. Bae "Rah! for the “U” Bowl Perhaps youthful enthusiasm at the Gniversity of Wash- ton can accomplish what mature precision has failed to for this community. Ever since Tacoma high students conceived and created our sister city’s! ndid Stadium, Seattle has been longing for a great open-| “air amphitheater. » Now the student body at the university is ready to under-| c colossal project—the construction of a $400,000) T’ that would seat 75,000 people, ' And every civic organization, every citizen, should be heath? x to see the students’ dream come true. Naturalists say that long ago the year Tacoma fills her Stadium for some worth- | Hebistoric waters were pres og Babe undertaking, Roosevelt said he “had no idea what |nowiy teceme extinct be season ot fluence a Stadium could be in the civic life of a) the workings of it# voracious appe- nity” he was suddenly motored down tte. Thus Nature eliminates the sidlne highway fate the curve of the averted. TEMPE - i] THE | that I was being threatened b si ‘ x grit structure, in which were assembled 40,000 people. c famous opera singers, last year, thrilled vast ongs in Tacoma’s Stadium. President Wilson spoke to in Tacoma this summer and only 7,000 here. ttle needs such an assembly place. | games at the university attract crowds greater) Denny field can care for. With an adequate amphi-| iter on the campus, colossal understakings, heretofore! sible, would be properly carried out. university students, acocrding to present plans, do contemplate calling upon the community for financial but expect to build their “bowl” in units from the; nings of their various activiti But Seattle will no doubt be willing to find ways and ins to help complete the project if it is once launched. fhe community needs just what the students are attempting t give the community. Dog held in jail for cat murder probably feels he is going to be hounded to death. ‘An Editorial by a Woman __ Edith The Star: Each year I have purchased plants at Mursery near the end of the Madison street car line. erably going there because of the courtesy and patience! Of the employes, which made buying a pleasure, Today, wanting bulbs for window boxes, I went to the jhouse—and found it in the hands of Japanese! Did I buy bulbs? I did not! But I got something free of charge. That “something” was a shock, a panic-stricken feeling an intangible calamity. | A subtle, almost imperceptible isation of coming danger to our open-minded, glorious Seattle, possessed me, Everywhere, every day, there are more of th > eunning, apparently unassuming, but certainly unassimilable | People, under our feet. Where is it going to end? When shall we realize that if we do not soon see that rica is for Americans, we will have to fight for ou is, our hotels, our homes and schools? = Queen City, Pacific Coast, while there is yet time, wake ‘up, wake up! AN AMERICAN WOMAN. ile | Santmyer and Walker for the school board. Election day’s coming near. | Thankagir ing day is an American holiday. . But they're not averse to carving Turkey in Europe. TONIGHT! YES! YOU MUST! You Can’t Stay Bilious and Constipated. Your Liver and Bowels Need ‘“‘Cascarets”—No Gripe! 7Ttrn the rascals out 4, biliousness, tress sour stomach and misery-making | fomneh ases—turn them out tonight and) your iver and care keep them out with Cascarets. | atipate Millions of men and womem take a/|t Gascaret now and then and never Kkhow the misery caused by a lazy | liver, clogged bowels, or an a the head colds Don't put in another day of dis | indigestion Let’ Cascarets cleanse your ferment excess bile from 1 the con-| te matter and poison in| Then you will feel remove | take the the sour Cascarets tonight straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep. |the spring of % The desire for case of tf) and plentiful diet fs universal and \y the great stimulus of man and animals alike. When man becomes greedy land takes more ease and food and| drink than is bin Nature dis |cards bim In the race for power and place for ease of cireumstance and relief from the stimulus of hunger, the modern man is apt to forget that un leas he is careful of his body he will be made to suffer for the infrac tion of Nature's tnexorabie physical law. With the joss in tone comes an equal lomt in mental acuity and the brain which for a time was able to operate despite the com. plaints of an overfed, under-exerciwed, self-potsoned body, stops working Statisticians assure us that the mortality rate of persons over 45 years of age is not onty not decreas but apparently even slightly in The strenuous life of today alone responsible for this boty xing ure h neglect bring decay The goal ia reached is amaksed—honor, position power are just being grasped when the apple of achievernent turns to the ashes of dixsotution. The brit mind becomes clouded, the hand ts no longer accurate. the eye which once ed fearlessly on the whole world i« dimmed and t is not long before the final break All of this waa entirely of the And poaitic these plus early wealth and Hant nteady up occurs preventable ther things be man who leads the who lasts the nd isu r overworks overeats, he c equal, it ix the well-balanced life est, whone work to y the best, he who nor overdrinks, who maintains standard of simple, healthy diet In moderation, who offsets mental work with physical recreation, who is as hor with own body as he is with his own business, When suc uch a one his physica} ndition is such that he overplays nor eas comes to and mental c gin enjoy in peace of mind and con tentment of body the fruits of his la bors. QUESTIONS ANDsANSWERS Q. Can typhoid be carried by milk? A. Yes, In 1907 a case of typhoid er ocgurred In & m Palto Alto, Cal fe from the pat stream on which a dairy was located ome distance below, ‘The milk cans of the dairy were washed in the tream and a typhoid epidemic of 236 pa developed a ng the people who were supplied with this milk. In 908 one iikman in Poston who was suffering with ty phold caused an epidemic over 400 In New York City a number of extensive outbreaks of typhoid fe ver were traced to infected milk This was before the enforcement of pasteurization of the milk supply. Q. Is it harmful to drink while eating? A. A glass or two of water taken at mealtime in small sips moist the food and helps to mix the with it, m thus causing the starch to quickly digested. Water taken in larger amounts hinders di gestion, especially if the food ts washed down without being properly chewed, The water should not be {ce cold, because cold drinks chill the stomach and hinder digestion, Cof. fee and tea hinder the work of the saliva, and these drinks whould be it were thrown into a} “lize the bones and feed them to the STAR—TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1919. —By CONDO SO USTEN TO THOSE BLOOD. IN TROUBLE - DID L HEAR Someone ij WAS ONLY SiMVQING, If THAT WAS SINGING, ‘THEN, FOR THS LOVE OF MIKG, NEVER FoR HELP It WE'LL SAY SO Old Hindy called to Berlin to testify reichatag and will have to saya a cable, has been fore a ride in a box car eee EDUCATED kshire ples, yord truck, Geneva Coop erative in Geneva (0) Free PressTimes, The flurry in Wall street, saya o linpateh, means that the former dob is going back home, Hold our ides whi laugh. Can you gine a former dollar viaiting Wail t and ever i back home? we OVER KING KOOM AND I Pover take a be we promised to tell you all about something different; here it in: We are sole selling agents for a able bath outfit that be d in'h en, bedroom or par jor; the bath that Hlastrates the principle of bathing with water, not in water —Advertivement in Burtington (Wis) Pree Press. Englivh author, He's come to up to his name. John Drinkwater, ome to America the right place to I Holders of to reeely A their Liberty bonds interest before Thankwe«! aren't you sorry ou didn’t buy $15,000 or §20,000 worth of thore t You could collect your interest and buy a tur | key see Tut, as the fireman anid as he climbed the ladder, “I don’t have to bother with @irters when I'm pull ing up my hone,” eee “Ie the right of promoting new iiices free for all?” post “If so, 1 soliett applt # for the & F. Bm. O. N. P. T. P. P., that We to may, the mination of Names ~ Poclety for the i ing the Preséntetion of Mov ' jing Picture Plays |xpectator finishes reading the names | | . | RANCE |who have trouble in digesting starchy food. | “UNCLE SAM, M.D." will anewer, this coleme i 1 | INFORMATION Efron, S Public Health Servies, Washington, D.C, | TOMORROW N the 26th of November, in 1504. Teabella, Queen of Castile, died Her reign saw great achievements in Spain. Grenada was taken from the Moors abd under the patronage of Isabella and Ferdinand, Colum bus discovered the western nent and claimed it for Spain. In 1120, on the 26th of Novem ber, Prince William, jewt son of Henry 1 was retursing from France when his ship struck a rock and went down. The prince was drowned, and it ts said that hix father never emiled agair Felicia Hemans’ poem, a onetime favorite for school recitations, wa written bout this incident It begine “The kk that held a prince went down and is entitied “We Never Smiled Again.” On the 26th of November, in 1703. the great etorm, th most violent! ever known in Engle blew down the E Lighthor Thir teen men were wrecked, and 1,50 and Beaumont, ad miral of the fleet, lost their lives. In 1663 the 26th of Novem-| ber, the first Harvest Thanksgiving} mation was ixeued by t iv-| il authorities of th Plymouth Col The first winter in New Eng n very hard for the ists, more than half number having died. When planted [n-| ley and Mayflower co! of their the summer came corn, wheat ha dant t ing winter garnering with feast of thanksgiving tumn of 1621 After this them for the com-| They celebrated its| the. first harvest | in the au the of Ply uth celebrated a harvest day, an nually, but it was not until 1668 that the elvil authorities proclaimed it. Washington, after the Revolu |tlonary War, issued the firat presi-| |dential proclamation, appointing a| \day of T on October 3,| jin 789. uring the civil war Lir coln established the custom of ap |pointing the last Thursday in |vember av Thankagiving Day and nnounced his intention to establish jit as a national holiday In 1832, on the 26th of Noven.ber the first stre® railway in America begam to opera It was the New York and Harlem road, which ran from City Hall to 14th st. The first jear, invented by John Stephenson, was drawn by one horse. | the 26th of ember, 1836 |John London McAdam, . the cele |brated inventor of the McAdam system of roadmaking, died in Scot land, Chureh m nkagiving | On People of Tibet, instead ef bury. jing bodies, slice off the flesh and |feed them to the birds, then pulver vultur ‘SHOULDA HUSBAND FORGIVE 4 |conmul genera! | to the ambu | tometrist, (unless absolu:ely necessary, Ty the time a of goenario writer h . directors, actors, ahagers, ete, ‘*# too tired to en joy the play.” . But, as the tailor remarked. foone may be hot, but it cooked.” oe “My ien't VIRTUE 18 ITS OWN REWARD Wanted—Clerk, Christian = man: What profiteth it a man that he|used sparingly by every one and! non.emoker and nondrinker, for EPN-|not weigh in the balance gain the whole world, yet lose his|should be avoided entirely by those era) office work; $17. Glad Tides Publishing Co,—Advertisentent in Chicago (IL) Tribune. re Great Dritain can't find a suitable for New York be- cause the mlary ts only $12,000 « year, Still, a man can get along on bed af 9 O'clock every night Editor’s Mail PRAISES FIRLANDS } Interest oe { | A 0 yuily Gen }$12,009. in New York-1f"he'l go to diseaers. | } 7 ' Editor The Star; Would you please | give a little apace In your paper for a worthy cause? My little girl came down with smallpox and was sent to Firlands e@anitariud’ by the health department, While we resented this at first, we Were soon reversed in our opinion, so we visited her there and it being our first visit to the xanitarium, must say that it was pleasant surprise to find such a clear homelike institution, ployes, quiet surrounding» courteous em in fact, j all that could be requested Our little girl speaks very well of hor nurses and doctors. She is hom ¥, and when children in it would seem there is no caine for complaint As & taxpayer T wish to commen! our commissioner of health, Dr Read, on the manner tn which th’s institution conducted and the health department in general, We re ceived the best of treatment by his department from the school doctor I have heard remarks, which 1 know were made by people who were | not acquainted with the details, and it is with the intention of letting peo- ple who have, or may hav perience, know there is no worry, If children were kept home they would have to remain indoors they play out and hay Y I can not praise the hea ment too highly. L F. METZGER, 6536 Dibble ave. was abun-| > DR, J. R. DINGON Free Examination BEST $2.50 cxasses on Earth We are one of :n stores In ti S grind lens and we ar few option: that really rt finish, he only one SEATTLE, ON Fins Examination free, by grad: D- Glasses not prescribed BINYON OPTICAL CO, 1116 FIRST avE. Between Spring and Seneca He's lucky he doesn’t have | Jon't com: th depart-| | aegrione Shere Can | Be Mo Compromise One Big Union BY DR. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) And now the talk is of One Big Union. The Actors’ Equity found they had to laffiliate with the American Federation of Labor in order to beat the managers. The Steel Strikers felt the need of enlist ing the co-operation of the railway men to | defeat the United States Steel Corporation. The Coal Miners want the Farmers and Everybody to go in with them in their | campaign to swat the Operators. Every fractional unit of the Labor Host discovers sooner or later that its efforts |to secure its demands require the aid of | \every other unit. United we stand, divided we fall; and therefore why should not All the Laborers lof this country get together in One Big Union? Then when they talk they would talk turkey. | Lam in favor of this. | The idea of the One Big Union of all the Workers in the U. A..to get what | | . | they want, appeals to me. | I have not joined the American Federa- j tion of Labor; it is not Big enough; it | doesn't include enough Laborers. | I want a whopper, a Union that would not be compelled to froth and threaten, but could smash right thru and get what it | goes after. | A_ Union everybody would have | knuckle to, or get out of the country. 1 A Union big it would include the Army, the Navy, and all the Policemen, A Union that would embrace even the Legislatures of the States, and the Senate aod Congress of the Nation A Union that could compel the President to do its will, by public opinion, and, if necessary, by impeachment. A Union that would control the Courts, from the Supreme Bench down to the Justice of the Peace. A Union so intrenched in public favor that a man who would dare to oppose it would be hooted down. A Union that the little Children in the Public Schools would be taught to respect, A Union that all Preachers would for, all women passionately love, ond men fight for. Fight for? Yes, and gladly die for. This is my Union. rg 8 pt be a have it. t is called the United States of America, Its Boss is Woodrow Wilson. Its controlling Delegates are the Senators and Representatives in Congress. Its Right Arm is General Jack Pershing and his men, i Any time this One Big Union wants ma it boo ahd see all Fp cee nd I am ready to join any posse that formed to make it hot for the Scabs. : $$ $$ ” —-—~-—-—— | Th 3 i he Old Gardener Says Three D S 80 to | If you happen to live tn a section jot the country which has been tm-/ | waded by that most iniquitous oie! the European corn borer, you wili| | probably your garden with a thoroness never | j before attempted. Wherever you) “A terrible Itehing com on my body. 1% bottles D. D, D. completely cured me.” ¢ able cure of a ome.” single bottle cured another . Balt Rheum of the bands.” | ted from recent letter from/ Rickey, Eikhart, Ind, Write) for mor be obliged to clean up) j |paye to rake up all rubbish, to pull up off the corn stalker en such remarka- hed by D. D.| f{ skin trouble | the cabbage stumps and clear This form of manitation yleids dividends |form of freedom from rauders, Some of the waste mater-| Arat bottle }ial may perhaps be thrown on the! . >. jcompost heap, but if insect peste! labound the eafeest plan will be tol BARTELL DRUG sTORE and blackheads to #e-| ex of eczema, that we feel it | your ease. Come in and| otit WwW arantes the Bbe, 60e and $1.00. in the| vere insect ma-| burn it all. A little compost would! with even | la single cut worm. ‘THE INSTRUMENT OF QUALITY ONOL, CCEAR AS A BELL, THE SIGN OF SUPERIORITY The trade-mark, Sonora, on a phonograph is a guarantee that its tone is of magnificent beauty; that its design-lines and appearance are wonderfully handsome and pleasing, and that it has more important. constructional features than any other phonograph. Comparison will convince you with- out a shadow of a doubt that THE HIGHEST CLASS TALKING MACHINE IN THE WORLD Manufactured by SONORA PHONOGRAPH CO. New York SOLD BY usts Jone Piano 1519 THIRD AVENUE