The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 15, 1919, Page 6

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2 mon 0, + 1 Outside the atet ch, for € months, or $ By carrier, city, ic per werk ( or EDITORIALS [5 Freshness of an Egg An esteemed contemporary, bewailing the dollar egg mat Ket, says that people demand fresh eggs instead of cold storage eggs. ; “Aside from its freshness, the cold storage egg is as good as the new laid one, but people must have the fresh eggs whether there are any or not.” Thus the editorial lament, Our idea always has been that about all there was to an eRe was its freshness, Indeed, there are a number of things that come te mind whose imkorent value is determined by their freshness. Aside frem eggs there are sermons, poems, horses, wives, babies and fish. Just te mrention a few off hand that occur te us, ’ Just as nebedy eares for a too long departe fish—a fish, shy, wastred wp from the deep, and allowed te repose on the Beach fer a few weeks—so second-hand babies are never egnsidered as desirable as fresh ones. ; | Or eourse fresh children, especially those of your neighbor, agcasionally require the salt ef discipline and the brine of veprimand, but, generally speaking, all of us prefer our) dabies fresh like our fish. : , When our dearly beloved pastor gets to his declining years, and trots out the sermors that he once dashed off in his youthful vigor, we are likely to hold a vestry session and send forth a call for a new pasfor, who picks his ser- mons each week fresh from the tree of knowledge. i$ Who cares about a horse unless he is fresh? A jaded) horse is of no especial use, and if he be so passe that crows | perch on him unmolested, why his par value is about two} dollars for his hide. And yet a dead horse, aside from the matter of freshness, ig as much a horse as he ever was. He has the same num-| ber of teeth and hoofs and spavins and such equine habili- ments, and were it not for the slight void caused by a} departed freshness he would be really valuable. A poet who hands us Browning or Bryant or Byron instead of fresh verse is not considered much of a poet, and yet these ancient lays are doubtless much better than any-| thing the poet will hatch in his little incubator. js When we get married, for the first time, we prefer ‘em fresh. After the third or fourth time we may come to) Widows, or vice versa, but freshness in wives has since the time of Eve been their most lauded trait. - We admit that a cold storage egg probably has as much shell as it ever had; and, somewhere concealed in its interior, | ere is doubtless more or less yolk and white, and a well igpes air cell; and, mayhap, an embryonic chick, but sdmehow, tho the egg is all there, it has been generally ayimitted that freshness in an egg was a virtue that was worth all it might cost. 5 = In our impetuous youth we once slid down hill in late ly, and wound up on a neglected nest full of eggs. lar eggs, only they weren't fresh. ' “Ma seemed to have the prevailing prejudice against un- fresh eggs, for she made us undress in the woodshed, and take a bowl of soft soap, and a brush, and scrub ourself from topknot to calloused heels before she even let us inside the door. And yet those eggs were, aside from their freshness, as good eggs as they ever were. We far our brother editor is going to have a right smart chore ahead of him trying to popularize the unfresh egg. Yes, the worst IS yet to come. To aid, he saye, in reducing the H. C. of L., or rather the H. C. of clothing the L., a Chicago man is about to begin manufacturing tailless shirts, a rubber band at the waistline being | utilized to do the work of the tried and true shirt tail. } | No doubt you have begun to write your Christmas letters) and wrap your Christmas gifts. Don't let a single one of | them go from you without bearing a Red Cross Christmas seal. These beautiful little seals are symbols that will instantly | be interpreved aright by the friends who find them on your letters and your Christmas packages. Thru them they will ain immediate assurance that the Christmas spirit of love and good will and helpfulness is to you a very vital thing. | And, who knows, the mere sight of one of these seals on a letter received from you may be the means of reviving in the soul of the receiver forgotten ideals of brotherhood end service. Prompting to appropriate action, these ideals will then redound to the good alike of your friend himself and of the many people with whom he is in contaet. It is this that is the supreme virtue of the symbolic Red Cross Christmas seal. It is especially because of this | that you are urged to purchase and use these seals gen-| erously. | They are sold, as you know, for a specific purpose. | They are sold to provide funds for carrying on a tireless campaign against that dread foe of man, the disease tuber culosi And against that foe no campaign can be waged} too relentlessly or supported too liberally. | The brews are not the only ones hurt by prohibition. There are the physicians who specialized in stomach troubles. Joel M. Johanso: Joe! M. Jotmsan, professor of English at the University of Washington, died of injuries sustained in an automotale accident Saturday afternoon. Those who knew him can understuid how keen is the loos to the state. He was a quiet, splerrdidiy equipped young man, who talked with students retker than to them. Ile lived with student who ealted him “Jo”; ne was youthful in spirit, yet ' beyond the aversse professor in training and ability He was the first young man from the state to win a Izhodes scholarship to Oxferd. He loved athletics, but few knew he had rowed on the crew at Oxford. He was at iatense student of literature, and he was quietly working in the creative field. He knew how to lead young men and women uncon-| sciously toward the best in life. He was one of the few| young faculty men at the university who exerted a wide influence outside of class rooms et he was extremel) modest and unassuming. His sudden death robs this community of influence. | Dr. Harvey Wiley, former chief chemist of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, told Philodelphia business men that any one can live well and have all he needs to keep him healthy and happy for 11 cents a day—the menu to consist of plenty of corn meal mush and milk. But what we want to know is whether or not that ie whet Dr. Wiley lives on? « The world won't end December 17, but Papa's pocket- book will be pretty well worn out by that time. | dinease, a. @ LAKE I : ptain w ralae } Rat he t and tea A legal bat was waged f splendid} THE SEATTLE STAR-—MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1919. By CONDO “Mov HAVG THE ADVANTAGES or Me —— WHORG HAVe We HOW TO RECOGNIZE SCARLET FEVER in dinting wieteod by { its com- Fever. sere threat and vomiting-—| Seartet fever these three symptoms in a ehild|the variety and severity wwually constitute the beginaing ef | plications w that dread dhe, seariet fever. canm appears As & rule th» rash door pet appear | The ment commen of [ Until the seeomd day. When thew flasmmation ef the (mophritix), Syrupton appear. tharefure, meind for eomptioatiornns (srk car cat deem) the doeter at emer, fer the dineasr In| inflammation ef the lining mosbrame often very dungercum and requires |ef the beart (emdecarditin), infin - theh mimat skilful medical care and| mation ef tymph glands (adenitte) auening. Of thom, me. Seartet fover shows ruarked varia. | Gir the mont eommen tons in ite severity, There are mild! He eure amd have the doctor attend OF abortive canon, im wittoh the rank Pathert. is scarcely visible, er tn whieh thy) ——— —s sore throat and “ranpierry temewe” |g. es oe may be the only stamm ef tie dinmane. | G7 am now Hving in fewn, and In certain epidemics, parthewlarty 1 | powe teem toh that the climate’ ef schools, thin type of the @incame may | Geuthorm California will bo better for constitute over a third of tlee camer | gin Pinaee mivine me On the other hand, the symptom 4 tt in praeticalt may be #0 that the pattem’. / tne bueare to tell yeu whether Sewth overwhelmed by the poem of th lon Collterina er the Middio States may dic within 24 te 8) are the mere healthful. However, a hours, with high fever, gremt restionm | ange of climate Me frequently ef eas, delirium and comvulstone. penotit In other cases the threat eymptemm | pan etd view concerning the parn- are prominent. and may be of tle Ut-| mount influence ef climate wpem most severity. Rapid ned thick mem brane formation talons place. nevere whted | hat food hypione ix of merq im may ox inte the Imterter ef the | portance than climate alent. The is seer, the 5 thre U6 | Ruemee af climate, te bo mare. ty by Bustachina commis (openines ef thee ear inte the throat), Death muy en- sae from miffeention, ome of Uh the tm tise be discarded an ef ne newer iden regarding of a change of climate }me manny t The wwelting of the sett parte, oF WAR) ag pre or restofative is that frome may met ie, comeing a fat a changes of re 00, habits, eccwpa ferwe. Comvatosecnee may be MBER tiie fond, otc, in unually of more lm delayed by porsitent entargoment 6f | ponamee chan the change Of atmen- the neck glamds amd the formatter of | oi ceie comditions deep aborsonm ta the meek, er by pureket discharges from the sere, @ T hawe heen told that my bee fs wYering from mal-nutrition. Is this a serious condition A. Mal-nutrition in a condition of ndernourtehment or underweight Tt tn seen Om the 16th ef Decembor im te! cd gator 4 year 714 Pepin tthe Faw, mayer ef] i, ), Paria, died lie wae meted for him i arent physica] stremeth amd vieror m the 1th of December boys and girls at a cy or im chil@heed t condition, which may lead to seriows con n import neelocted. equence In 151 ie Odildren suffering from meal-mutrt Altomeo Albaquerqun, murnamed TR tion are mot only helow normal Great, alec the Portugung Mare of! weight for heleht, but they gait Indim, died He greatly extended | ,, more wiy than they should Portugal's ponwensione and power In) At the ages of & to 10 ye when a Indim and the Hast ealthy hil f five On the 14th of Decessber 9 1772) nound gain but the Poet , the first or) one H ove ne at ganioed militant act of the A an all to 16 ve when healthy Reveletion, occurred, Since 1765 | ct n 14 galr m nix to ten there had been straine@ relations be-| pounds a year, they may gain onl tween Fi 1 and the American |two or three pounds. When childrer onies over the subject of taxation.|/do not ¢ gain regularly in The Stamp Act had been passed by | weight ebody {s wrong. If there pecs parliament and repealed | boys and ¢ are welghed regularl account of the opposition in the nth, this condition of mal nie Later another act waa! nutrition would be dincovered early pamed providing for customs duties }and not allowed t on to sertous to be ted at American ports on | consequence ° glans aper, and lead UNCLE SAM, M.D.." will anawar, opalipeeys ' inted and the| either in this colamn act was repealed ather to caiy. to byaiese, canhtatiog’ one ine f Bngland than | prevention of diseas for a t 6, the king re ’ aie ; tax on tea.| tons of © purely per to preseribe for \mdivi n Address INFORMATION Eprron ; Washini wh ¢ U.S, Public Health Service APPLES O at Westlake Market DWIN J. BROWN will eat the weeks | me meee tom porntoie far | health in being repineed by the view | WE'LL SAY SO On bas | , | a | Americanism There Can the ‘Issue of Art and Nationalism SHoP EARL BY DK. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) FoR You, eae gama “uae i It is much easier to raise a grand passion | never be tolerated there again, Sir Thomas ' than to lay it. Seecham’s “Parsifal” drew a bigger audi- JEWELERS Or even to curb it. | ence recently than ever at Covent Garden, HURRY. And perhaps the enthusiasm most diffi- | altho presented almost entirely by English omy 8 ie: th Sehais ty ddsanst abd fiiletlivent Heeada | artists, whom it has always been the fashion Buying nygaliend pin 2 nveing| pounds | there to dercy as compared with foreign DAYS LEFT, i patriotism. singers. With the war on we were supposed to hate! Even France is coming to. The patrons all things German. This was made to in- | of a fashionable Parisian restaurant were dlls clude German Art, Letters and Science, | canvassed recently as to whether they ob- Greetings Bo nies, ian't it, these altho every reasonable person knows that | jected to hearing German music played ms : gee od po Fasgg a sg Mh geen in stich matters there is no race, class, or | there, especially Wagner’s compositions. By cote: ak tie det + tine | Nationality, | an overwhelming majority the guests voted ren't heated? That‘efunny. Neither Mobs broke up the attempt to give Ger- | for playing such mus Many pointed out ate the cars on our line man opera here, and the authorities in one | that it is France’s privilege, as the victor eee town refused to let Fritz Kreisler play the | and in compensation for other losses, to take ae a ‘. Pa wonendaty rant | fiddle. | the liberty of “claiming” any music com- ton we were unable te cnawee'the; This elernent of the mania incident to | posed or played by Germans. other day. He writes as follows: war we shall have to reckon with for some! But some strongly objected to Germean Editor We'll Say So Does a prize | time, music, and in one place there was a fight prone ——. — yg gd But after awhile we shall recover our! between a member of the cafe orchestra saat’ Ohen. Bn bak TA tromin equilibrium and recognize tha ALERT CHANDLER Porkaps Mr Chandier weeld like) te keesner a charter member of our new Moebety fer Drewertien of Pe wetetion ef Tiwwee Beeman Hee about i, Alt De you faver the mowemmnt? We weld he te hear frm YON ated ether reams em thie | inmpartant mehyeet eee Pernemally, we chal to be a bane wren rower thas whem there in| none better «ut Kant Madises way, and we wre distinetly opposed to any wotivity em the part ef meddling of Moore te restriet the sate of malt We believe that sterling devetes of the basement apert, Heb Ebeeker, ts | with wn alee, Ih, Saul? | ee ANSWHHED bens and pet-house politicians States Senate, and militarists of all countries. England and France seem ly than we. that altho German music was TMK JAPANESE PROMLEM | I am Uhimicing ef buyin chivieas | imvarion, about which there is much written, expecially on our to keop in the back yard and | comm, in not yet fully realized, and} duo my HCL. Bat & friend of | much that is maid does not get to the| mine sae lan festion an ehickens are expensive He says they eat) point. Of course this may be a no | araim by tke bushel, Is that tree | tion too, but let's see, Does it mat) rH Ww ter whether the No, it Mm net true. Chitkems @e | meget allows Americans trade privt net cat amything by Gee bushel They le or no privileges in Japan jest by the peeks. whether the Japanese make better! | - une of land here or not. or whatever | | Withia a week or two I shall egee may be marned, exoept ef one, } that Americans cannot exist on the} low plane of living that Is a common place with the Japanese’ The case is the same with all the Ortentals. | my Rew Sewelry etere, an ae it in | eee te be 8 strietly meters ep | edate ahep, with sahepeny trim ferniture, ot [tink | | should kave a peed Mogan, Wit! | but we are not yet face to face with [yeu please suqueet one?l-—G. Bh. T | the em regarding the other A weiry mere Geran't teed a rece Let us suppose that these races were perfect types of the human race. We know that they can people eur coentry and not be mineed from thelr heme. We know that they In lcreane in population fast enough to people our country within a very few years comparatively. We know | that these people have fallen #o low economicaily that labor up to some times 20 hours per day ie ordinary Almost with them. We know that they subsist on #0 allowance that their cost oman. Wheat you want f a watet. wort, 1 have written a nore wtery about & Mall terrier, What de yeu think ef thet BOM | It Ctmht © be Mt of snappy | teft. | 1 Atm G mamhetnm and yentemtay 1 bomeht a cornet, paying 9150 fer It De you thitk that wan a wise thing | te x: | that eanmen te be 8 sound ie femal! an | | Vented. of foet and clothing ts compara-| tively Insignificant. We know that they contribute comparatively noth ing to the upbutiding of the state the commonwealth. Now, what ts the remult? | If they can produce at such & ty insignifigant cont, | What te the @iffersmce batween 9 mutiny em a battloweip and a rew of maples em a country read? One in treasen @m the high reas 4 the other in trees ye thet) wey comparady ey WE, the American people, MUST | @URSTIONS We CANKE? meet the name cost of production or) | ANSWER sink to their manner of living and I have beom reading tm the papers | tine, their, level. thetr eee eal about (he geveram jCan we do this? If any | Ns ° os. dus ae van Jamong us who so think, let him @ ies to the haunts of these Orientals and | anual observations, Let the mud Mats around Seat. | tle, the Chinese quarters of Portiand and San Francisco, or to any locality where these people have got a foot take a few him go t | Pimane tet] me why it is that altho my watch has two hands and one of them beats the other in the trip) around the dai, neither is ever the seat. fe ing. He will find a dearth of his own | ene, &. R people there and a deadness of feel-| Phere F fig will erine him os if before a de-| | There is a cross walk near our sorted planet Ie this not proof honse 1 have watched It for sev , . cael eral years, but I can't see why It enough tat our pecpe -~ In cross, De von heautnnc. WL. | crowded off the land, that there is| wi saan “\a blight going on already? Now, again, to simplify, how in it | What kind of a key should I use|, NOW, Meni. 10 mieive here? Is © open a hemlock?—D. T. t not because he produces cheaper?| Please give me the addreas of 7 pets rh rome pate some good sculptor who is good at |e onadlaen” ao st jfigures. Or should I hire a book-| chean? If we rd rr es j the sum of it ° willing to try ee a jit? Should we try it? The answer BACHELOR'S AD, » WAGER | is NO! Why Recause with euch} | MONEY 4 fallen econe ndition fatie | Wanted—A lady or old maid for| mentality, falls uplift, falle tdeal bookkeeper, at 157 St. James at.|falle the standard of elvilization to | Phone 820F. Advertisement in Sault| which America has arisen above the Marle (Mich,) News. world—the rest of the world. Is that] Safety for 1¢ a Day For just a fraction over one cent a day you can rent a PRIVATE INDIVIDUAL SAFE in our modern Safe Deposit Vault Absolute Security for bonds, valuable papers. or rewelry is surely worth so modest a charge FOUR DOLLARS A YEAR and upwards, according to size, ts the modest cost of owning your own safe Resources now over 65.200.000 PUGET SOUND SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION Hours: from 9 am. (0 2 mm WHERE PIKE STREET CROSSES THIRD On the 16tr December three ships laden with tea he her om : H t an apple store s xrant a #p permit| WESTLAKE MARKET will > @natane ine vexetables and fruits we . as ' is flung the tea t ' r » will be guaran following morning saw the dawn or : : agg he Ponte 3 Every apple will be guaranteed ' DR, EQWIN J. BROWN PAT ETA) pth l.¢ Dba! producers, whether coal diggers and farmers or musicians and poets, that make war; it is the blatherskites and mis such as the Junkers of Prussia, the Bour- ing from intellectual shell-shock more quick- | From London comes the news the war amid protestations that it should | MUST t it is not the | and a diner. Recently att band to play Tuileries angry shouts. the people tha’ played again. In time we schief makers, of the United and profiteers to be recover- | banned during | in themselves Gardens empts by a French military German compositions in the were drowned by the The authorities had to assure t such music weuld never be shall come to see that the great worlds of Commerce, Art, Literature, Religion and Seience are not to be prosti- tuted to our mad nationalism, but contain the cure for our narrowness and the true basis of the Unity of Mankind. not enough? If not, let us look at} for that of our children's children. | Granted that there are none} among us, none of our own people} of any significance who do not real children and our | Japanese govern | tne these things, let us now turn to/from high quarters. | the remedy Forewarned is fore. | problem is moment: | uous, These hordes are at our very | doors, We transferred two million soldiers to Hurope, They can trans-| fer men also. } The Aniatic produces cheaper, He therefore selis cheaper. He has a dangerous hold already because he can sel! only to Asiatios and make & living right on the ground already But he owns very little land. He has to lease nearly all real estate. He anne’. This has been shown a game by our precious lawyers whereby he can Sequire title thru his hative born ehild, ad infinitum. Thir.can be stopped up to the time the child be- | comes 21 years of age Rut the remedy ts above laws, WE CEASE TRADING WITH THE ASIATICS. We. MUST not leare lands, houses. or what not to Asiatics! We must call off the deal! We must buy nothing of ASIATICS. We must not hire them! We must/ not patronize Astatios! We must cease to handle any pro- ductions of Asiatics in America! We/| must boycott every MANHOOD LESS PROFITEER WHO TRADES IN ANY WAY WITH ASIATICS. Let every American, therefore and henceforth, who possesses mentality enough to stand up among his kind | | millions of them THE EDITOR’S MAIL adopt the consciousness that when The seriousness of the Japanese| the sacrifice we have made for our he PATRONIZES anything Asiatic * | standard of living, for our use and |he is sacrificing his own people and surrounding himself with Asiaties. This iter might be concluded here, but for the consideration of a few Japanese Americans, let it be added something of the Japanese character When the Jap anese were thru war in the neutra! country of Korea, a land of twenty million people, they seized that coun. try almost exactly as Germany sought to seize France and Belgium, except Japan gave no excuse! She then proceeded to crush these totally inoffensive people into subjection Worse, years later, Japan, after lend. ing assistance to put down disorder. ly autocracy by Germany, returns to Korea with some of the self-same soldiers and proceeds to terrorize these innocent Koreans. Japan burns something in number like 30 Korean villages and a large number of peo- ple; she deliberately burns alive in the Christian churches precisely like the Turks did the Armenians. If any there be who wish to proclaim the good faith of the Japanese, who wish to defend the human sentiment of Japanese above mere blocks of wood, let them come forward and advise the American people how tender we shall be handled when our Pacific coast becomes peopled with and their’ navy backs the landing of armies of them jand other Astiatics. A. B. MOLLOWAY. The chrysanthemum was inteo- duced into England from China in 790, SOME DAY YOU CAN BUY THAT HOME OR GO INTO BUSINESS FOR YOURSELF WHEN YOU GET THE BIG “BANK ROLL” This bank has 22,000 satisfied savings depositors who are all saving for some purpose. our methods of doing business. Come in and let us explain We are always glad to accommodate people who come to our bank, if possible, whether they be customers or not. SAFETY IS OUR FIRST CONSIDERATION Start an account with $1.00 NOW in the Oldest and Largest strictly Savings Institution ASHINGTON SAVINGS BANK in the Pacific Northwest. MUTVACT / / i Second 810 Avenue Established ASSETS 30 Years $11,500,000 | 4 TRUSTEES v } BP. ¢ Ames Henry* R. Kine ‘ Fr. Vilas J T. Condon William A. F o OW. West r. B. Finley I Raymeeé BR James Sha David Whitcomt Frasier F. K. Struve Bugene B. Favre, Spokane ilvar Janson William Thaanum L. ©, Janeck, No, Yakima

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