The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 28, 1919, Page 6

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Ry math, ow 1.50; ¢ tate of W Fhe per mor per year | Seattle—and “Cow Counti The following is from the Everett Tribune: “The policy which the Seattle Several years in not Ghampion team to play State, is not only an exhibit ortamanship but the cause ¢ Gn antagonistlo sentiment ast Seattle that Mmited to the ®ehoo! authorities or to the short football season of each year “As a eélfish expedient resorted to by higher up school offictals te fav heir hides it has worked well, white Seattle pays the price in Possible loss of friendship. ‘ “The Seattle policy Im its exclusiveneas breeds football snobbdiahness Gt the expense of the game and doesn't make athletes: “Look ovér the ‘varsity or the under classmen elevens at the University @f Washington and compare the percentage of Seattle men on the teams With the percentage of the Seattle enrollment at the Institution, That Will tell what the Seattle system of developing players does for the Youth of ite city, However, that part is Seattle's affair “The unpopul aloofness of the Seattle schoot authorities tn the Matter of their athletics isn't a subject of dissatiafaction to the few football players on the teams in the high schools of Bellingham, Everett Wenatcheo, Spokane, Etiensburg, Aberdeen and many other cities; tt ts @ matter in which each city that takes pride in ite part) ular team, is Interested *It takes the form of reasoning that Seattle, the big city In the state, @yer ready to call on the emalier ones for anything It wants, seeking the patronage of their merchants, coveting their good will, draws Into Re athietio shell when {t comes to a test of athletic prowess “Seattle is willing to be friendly in everything exeept possibly the one Thing in which the small town can creditatly compete with her, Here the line is drawn, “The Tribune belleves the display of anti-Seattle sentiment that shows fieelf on occasion and every time the legislature meets, sapecially th @ealing with things affecting the University of Washington, has been @coentuated by this very Seattle sohoo! policy and that the business and @ther interests of that city would Sentiment if they would insist that the fence behind which Seattle sehool @ficials have found refuge for years, be torn down, | “This state isn't big enough for a dual policy In school athletics any hore than 4 dual educational policy.” h Now, there you have it! If the holiday atmosphere Weren't so thoro today, perhaps we would want to reply a heatedly that if Seattle ever got anything for nothing the rest of the state, we have still to hear of it. j Seattle pays a greater proportion of taxes than its rep- Tesentation in the legislature would justify; it has more tion per representative than elsewhere in the state; : paid for bridges, and roads, and this and that and the other thing, getting nothing in return except a bit of —— interference every now and then in purely local We could go on, ad infinitum, in this line. Really, it is trouble or difficulty at all to prove a case against the ture, so far as Seattle is concerned. The truth may but it is nevertheless true that the smaller counties | state, having a sues pepesciation in the legislature | 4 Seattle, take particular glee in denying it rightful rep- "resentation and honest legislation. Any attempt to justify this—whether by calling Seattle snobbish or greedy or ‘what not—is inherently wrong and unmoral. Just how Seattle gets more out of the rest of the state than it gives, has always been a puzzle to us, tho ‘cow county” legislators have repeated the assertion time and) Rather, we are inclined to believe that Seattle has given— ‘and given generously—to the state at large. It has given of the smaller towns the benefit of its greater and terminal facilities. It has given better train and! ; service than they would otherwise have had. It has given them a better market for every line of product. So, on the general question, we are not apt to take the Everett Tribune seriously, however much wrought up it $ to be. Nor is there any occasion for getting exer- fied over “Seattle’s lack of sportsmanship,” for its a triple riveted cinch that Seattle won't fit into that classification, however eager some of the smaller towns may want to fix} that brand. If memory serves us right, the Seattle schools it of city month > for Ry carrier, elty es” ; horitien have followed f MN teama or the ¢ the bigh schools of am is not Eo! On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise EVERETT TRUE I'cc HECP es JUST ON lay Ce 1s, HUNT UVP SOME HORS % THIS 13 A PUBLIC ||GARGLING ACT DRINKING FOUNTAIN, do more to create a kindlier state | | } —By CONDO ND, AND GH TO STA’ In southern Callfornia several ages ago the ofl escaping from a lit Ue spring formed in a depression of the earth a little pool The lighter portions of the of] evaporated, leay- ing the sticky aephalt From time to time the rings cov ered the surface of the pool with water, animals and birds came down to drink, sank tnto the asphalt and were impritoned in thie giguatic animal trap. ‘The hubery wolves mw there be fore their eyes freah animal food of every sort, from the enormous mas todon to the smallest bird. They, too, were drawn {nto the trap as were also the large saber-toothed tigers which then roamed that victs ity. OVEREATING The beet in to Average course, neither det indulgence, neither the followin of the inelastic dietary nor the misrucue and ilbconeidered ase foods, Many @ socalled case of dy sia i nothing In the world but the rebellion of an overworked stom- ach, the remonstrang of a body which bas been etuffed to repletion. A great deal has been accomplished tn the reduction of infant mortality because we are able to contre! what infants may eat. Adulte must for themasives ex- ercise this as self control. If thie fa done there will be a decline In our adult mortality rates and an in- crease tn health and efficiency. | WE'LL SAY SO SAdoP EaRty Sister Sve MUST -Be Greetingst Are you still giving thanks? . ee After reading accounts of what happened In New Orleans Thankagty. ing day, we find ourselves wondering what we had to be thankful for here . Still, we were thankful, We were thankful becati#e 10 gallons ranged mh quart and black bottles on our basement shelves will be ready to open about next Chewsday. ee Chewsday! That's @ good word Why ts it Thankagiving never falls on Chewsday? eee ‘The dog imprisoned for killing a cat, was not an tptodate jail bird He failed to offer his interstitial glands to the highest bidder. ee By the way, didyouexperiencethe bellyache? After all, what is Thanks givifig withdutitebelyache? eee forces to patrol beats in etyilian | Clothes Instead of uniforma at night. [It doeen't listen good. How te he to |protect himself from holdup men? Yes, and how is the decent citt ten géing to distinguish him from/ holdup men? eee If the public ts to be saved from a @ugur graft in 1920, says Atty. Gen, Palmer, the sugar equaltzation jboard must. be continued How about protecting the pubile from the wugar graft tm 19197 eee RETIRING For Sale—faby carriage, etightly used. Gotng out of businens—Ad- vertisement in Wauseon (0.) Re publican, eee A man whe fiver (Copyright, 1919, } | The fighting is done. ‘The cannon are silent. No more are they digging trenches, bombing cities, and sinking ships. But the war is not over. One woe is past, and behold another. War is simply one kind of disorder. is the organization of one nation to destroy another, But there is another kind of dis- order whose possibilities of damage are quite as great. It is Anarchy, the organization of a nation to destroy itself. And Europe is on the brink. Every |from across the ocean bears the same tes- |timony. Europe is on fire. It may hurn up. | The prime cause of this is the war, which | sto) production, brought gigantic waste, and demoralized the population. Now come hunger and cold. Irritated and stung by physical diseom- fort, the people are easy prey to the crazy fanatic who promises Utopia if his pet scheme is adopted. “Arise!” he cries. time for parley. Go u you want from those who have them. Don’t | trust Government! It is a capitalistic fraud. | Use force!” | In other words, go and get what you want as the Prussians tried to do—by force and frightfulness. Mr. Vanderlip reiterates that Europe is on the verge of a tragedy. Mr. Filene, after carefully studying con- | ditions, says the outlook is one of grave danger. And here stands rich, resourceful Amer- ica, What is our duty? Certain voices cry: America for Americans. “Strike! This is no Keep out of Zuro- the 29th of November, in 611, Clovis, conquerer of Gaul, and the rea! founder of the French mon- It | intelligent traveler who returns | and take the goods | “Let Europe alohe. | The War Is Not Over BY DH FRANK CRANE by Frank Crane) pean squabbles. Don't an of Nations!” 1 In other words, having spent billions treasure and thousands of lives saying rope from the Hun, let us eut and run when | she is threatened by the Bolsheviki, This no decent-minded man can Such cowardly, ignoble, and selfish is repulsive. We must help. The situation now calls for more than it did in 1917. America is in a crisis. If we tum now and run from our duty, we need think we shall save our own precious 8) for the horror of Europe will certainly f us; and it ought to. The Treaty will be signed, the r joined. But even then the war is not o We must help. We must, of our ab ance, feed and warm and finance banid and wretched Europe. ‘ Humanity And its voice is higher even than Patriot ™. } _ We must stop our snarling and ing, get together, go to work, our distressed sister. How we have slumped since the armistice Said Mr. Redfield: “The reaction fror the elevation of spirit and purpose characterized our people in the war has b shocking. We have reacted into an app o of class selfishness varied by violence. There is something to ju fear that others will think us a nation ¢ quitters, and it takes no little confidenee te ay us hopeful that we will yet do part.” y But that confidence we have. We are quitters. We will finish the job. American common sense, idealism, manity, and pluck will yet win the gi war, both for Europe and for het join { Grocery Stores in Automobiles ' Prove Successful in Canton, Ohio CANTON, Nov. Flory Grocery ané Baking Co. 28—The A. Rj suecessfully operating @ ts| setting groceries from In any city On the Pactfie Const Is taking A great chance When he goes to bed Uniess he makes sure That all the doors archy, died. He fixed the royal res- idence at Lamatia, the modern Paria, which then comprired only the little Isle de France in the Seine In 1268, on the 29th of November, Pope Clement IV (Guy de Foulques), 4 Frenchtman of great prudence and moderation, died. On the 29th of November, tn 1530, Thomas Wolsey, nai, died in disgrace, Wolsey, who began life as @ butcher's boy, rose to be archbishop of York and prime minister of England. He wanted to be pope, but Julius de Medict was elected. Wolsey, who owed his for- tune to the capricious favor of Hen- ty VIIL, lived in great magnificence. Hie expeners exceeded the revennes of the crown. At one period he had |in hie retinue $00 servants, In 1682, on the 29th of November, He ts & young man He may wake op ‘The next day In a hospital Ané fina Ho bas no glanéx And if He is an old man the Engtieh cardi-| jtaking store service to And Giscovered the art of engraving in mezzotint. On the 29th of November, in 1759, Wiliam Dickens died at Kysoe, Bng- jland. Dickens, a stonemason, fell }122 feet from the mpire of @ church |) jand was so little injured that he lwas soon able to reascend and fin-| central warehouse. ish his work. He fractured one leg.!is 13,000 2 tripe but sustained no internal injuries | country ciscricta, tee Ca of and lived for 40 years after his reo-| with supplies of fresh exes ord tumble. duce. The expense of In 1788, on the 29th of November, | service to the customer is not | Marie Theresa of Austria, died. er than delivery, members of On the 29th of November, tn 1807./ fem gay, and there is @ laewe the royal family and court of Por-|ing in overhead and other: tugal emigrated to Brasil, after the French had invaded Portugal. In 1760, On the 29th of November, Detroit was surrendered by the French to the English at the end lof the French and Indian war. On the 29th of November, in 1814, The automobile stores are 16 jong and stx and one-half feet and are fully stocked daily The ~ Let's go cat at > 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, Today acientiste are engaged tn excavating the bones deposited there by Indinerset appetite, } The aim of civilization is to create| inhibition, the quality which holds Dack and directs to useful purposes! the national preventing them from leading man into the pit-| falls which beset over-indui j wah rane Aan Be, Hunger ts the great ath is of “Tt the natural appetite * attowed| PEDALS TO DOCTOR If the natural appetite is allowed to dominate, it leads to overinduk! tHGA. N, ¥, Nov. %.—With gence and the unwary victim sud| blood wtreaming from a bullet hole denly finds himself ih a trap from/in his forehead, John Cole of Nor which he cannot escape. | Wich mounted his bicycle and ped One of the great elements in maim | aied to a surgeon's office after he taining health is the regulation of| had been shot in his home by Her the bodily intake to meet the appe-| bert A. Law of that city. Cole haw tite, | fractured skull and his condition The man who works with his) is critical. hands requires more food than the| Thé police say that Law objected brain worker }to frequent vieita which Cole made The man who labora tn the open | to his house and had warried him to alr needs more nourishment than he| stay away. Going to Cole's house, who sits cooped in an office all day | Lew started an argument with Cole, tong | Which developed into a fight. Law Give the sedentary worker the) wae arrested. used to lick the outsiders rather regularly for a godd many Years. We do not mention this in a boastful way, however. Later, when Seattle had five or six high schools of its wn, the school board decided that it would be better for the scholastic training of the men, as well as it would be) healthier for the public’s purse, to have the Seattle schools | ‘play one another instead of flitting all over the state. We Shall not say that this was a wise or unwise course. We are rather inclined to like the idea of games with outside towns. However, the present policy was not adopted out of a@ny fear or because of “poor manship.” Now that the question is raised, we would suggest, if we were asked, that the winner of the city championship play the state championship team. And Seattle wil! not vse, Sy, the championship to Everett or Aberdeen or Humptulips or any other part of the state. Not if we know Seattle rightly—and we think we do. will answer, qasetléne of gebtees trterses teleting onty to hygiene, munitation and ot disease, 14 will for pie So & purely personal for tedtvidwat INFORMATION mDtTOR, formed an organisation to determine| Prince Rupert, son of Frederick, the effect of tobacco on the human /|king of Bohemia, die@. Prince Ro body. The ayerage American citizen pert, who fought tn the Pinglish civ the Londen Times The machine, |would much prefer that they decide |i] war, was a g0od soldier but a|invented by a Saxon named Koenig, |whether or not it bas an effect ontmetter scientist. He invented what|printed at the rate of 1,100 papers lace curtains. | qalled after him, prince's metal,.an hour, “UNCLE SAM, M.D.” |the firet newspaper printed by| dine te this ccteme | steam power was issued. This was! A family conference concerning ways and means to cut expeditures will do more than any government ac- tivity or promise to reduce the cost of living. lappetite of the day laborer and if} ote RE’S A BATH 5 Justice for All that appetite be uncontrotied, the| HE rental body will become clogged with the | poteonor ent of by a "| The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teach- sintteeh ie, puctelbas. dotactiectng| eneiiatae te 2000 ing has just presented the results of a three-year study of | will surely follow |Gnacinak!, with a speck of radium the workings of our courts. It is the work of the most con-| ,,",% Just a4 bad to wat too anes || ote ee eee 4 cure, took « servative investigators in the country. ge er a . ‘ soy Maty s hoepstal Ghe fay * The report nevertheless finds that there is one kind of | peng =o Pog ipo od pl wm “is pecs the slag Gane law for the rich and another kind for the poor. It says in so Many words that poverty prevents many people from getting |~ justice in court. Causes of ‘atdenial of justice to the poor, it finds to be due to delays, which handicap the poor liti gant; court costs and fees charged by the state, which often | prohibit access td the courts by the poor, and by the ex- of lawyers’ services. Expense is the fundamental ifficulty. The existence of a free government, as the report justly points out, depends upon making the wchinery of justice so effective that the citizens shall believe in its impartiality and fairness. So long as we allow our system of justice to| Temain open to the charge that it works one way foy the wealthy and another for the poor, long do we encourage | attacks upon our government and judicial system. It is up to us to remove this cause for complaint. The report shows how. It recommends “small claims courts,” with informal procedure; domestic relations courts, using probation officers; industrial accident commissions admin- istering workmen’s compensation acts. These are only be- ginnings, which should be widely extended. Do you want to buy shoes that are strongly made of the finest heavy leather—even if they cost a little bit more? We think you do and that’s why we are making the BONE-DRY SHOE, making it better and out of better material than any manufacturer has ever dared to use for a working ON EVERY man’s shoe. Bone Dry “5 LOOK FOR THE NAME We think you will be glad to pay a dollar or so more fora shoe, if you find out that it gives you about $6.00 more wear- ing value and comfort. Whether you work in the city, coun- try or woods, you will find a BONE DRY, at any of the stores listed below, that will be just what you want. Stop in and look them over—see the heavy leather of finest grade—notice the workmanship. Buy them and wear them hard and when they finally go—you'll want another pair. BONE-DRY SHOE MFG. CO. Seattle, Wash. icious as its constant repression. lwent a When Opportunity Knocks! How many times in the past have you been unable to take advantage of a real opportunity, simply for a lack of a little capital ‘ Determine Now that this ism Never Happen Again, Join the thrifty Seattle Citizens who are to day providing for the future by adding steadily to their savings in this strong Financial Intitution and while they save, thep earn-= Never less than 6% has been paid to our members during the past Eighteen years RESOURCES OVER $3,500,000 ‘HOURS: —9 0 m to5 pm Puget Sound Savings ® Loan Association WHERE PIKE STREET CROSSES THIRD BB 4 ae Lieut. Maynard drew a record congregation for his F na gt oe {Sy 100 Second Ave. firat sermon after the flight across the continent. They came to see a hero. Almost any preacher who sticks to his job at his present salary is a hero. So. A. Al ve. at Riverside. BoNEDRY Shoe Dressing Preserves Shoes and Leather > I. W. W. in the Tacoma jail began a hunger strike yesterday. They certainly selected a poor time to begin —on Thanksgiving. = aaaaa aS In Petrograd one pint of milk costs 80 rubles. This seems high until you reflect that a pint of rubles isn’t worth a tinker’s cuss word. * The wages of Thanksgiving ie turkey hash,

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