The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 8, 1920, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1920. ———— The Seattle Star = On the Issue of Re mista ahr ane : Hitmen ENaC Fis" ger'manthn SUA Yor ¢'anine” or 18 Be No Compromise per year, by carrier, city, 12¢ per week | ——— : - | EVERETT TRUE —By CONDO! Me To Adjust Labor Disputes = =F = | WE'LL SAY SO Pessimism’s Cost : : / = Greet! Pity the poor me Author of “The midae ne rae a abd a | tle never rides home in the crowded Kast Madison ntreet car, He auto The Kansas legislature is meeting in special session to consider new legislation covering industrial problems, par- thood,” Pte ticularly strikes. A fight will be made to establish an in- Ho knows not the Joy of & (Copyright, 1919, by The Associated Newspapers Gustrial court to adjust labor disputes. E uD oe erimas hake the happr-| ,ecentiy I came -acro a remarkable | disease hoveless until the breath of life » of life editorial in a medical journal. Its substance has actually left the body.” This is the fi st attempt to take the proposed industrial umpires idea from - discussionary ba 3 ea sre nf és Yé be id aye was an urgent warning to physicians never True of heart disease, this statement effec ans sts a avate stris wa inty and sunny ~ fete p it into effect: If Kansas sets up a system of industria tuiree Rees petals Moomed in (12 be pessimistic in their attitude to pa-| may with equal truth be applied to nearly e tients. all forms of disease. To pronounce a 8 Pessimism, it was pointed out, reacts to | hopeless may actually have the effect of the disadvantage both of the pessimistic; making it hopeless when recovery would and tecaed we « fey doctor and of the patients in his gloomy | otherwise be possible. Pessimism is a po- leaches winced. They eyed us | sphere of influence. It tends to lessen the | tent force in rai ing the death rate. Not ine disdaintully, jealously, ‘And set number of: those willing to be treated by | | Also pessimism has much to do with raise aggre te him. And it makes it doubly difficult for | ing the poverty ra If doctors need to 30 do parent A a | see * \him to cure those he does treat. be warned against pessimism, : late nee , sabes | Indeed, the mere fact that he expresses “yenatpaad and all le oe way concerned in uae Seaien vt pes them | doubt as to the outcome of a patient's ill- | C°y@ oping the - escneafle others. ‘ loose with anything but a amile.|ness may insure a fatal outcome. At all _To take a gloomy view of a boy’s or Nearly every woman stiles now on | events, his doubt is more than likely to girl v4 Hagberg OWS oO msist te the hope- ‘= er ka |keep a patient ill when he ought to be re- | [@58ness of his or her ever accomplishing «| gaining health. much, ey be to render accomplishment . er impossible. We beg to announce that In proof the writer of the editorial in The world is full of men and women in- Fox Hunter tives in| | question cited the striking testimony of | pompetent and spverky ateseein because of that Green Berry || Dr. Charles L. Greene, who, speaking to 4 | the fie at bis ‘of the pessimiail umpires, there will be hot arguments about the method of selecting umpires and the extent of their activities. For instance, the opponents of the plan argue that the umpires would not have technical knowledge of the industry involved. Without this technical knowledge, they claim, equitable decisions would be impossible. The answer made by the plan's advocates is that both jes to the dispute could lay the necessary technical information before the umpires, just as evidence is submit- her cheeks, She carried shat Seat leeches furtively, and ole She took the seat v — Leoches ted in courts. 1) m: = It has been further argued that controversies would be subject to the process of court delay if appealed to the if if ig a . e champions of the plan retort that no one would suffer by those delays. The umpires’ awards could be re- © troactive if accepted—go into effect on the basis of the : t date at which the dispute was brought to the indus- real umpires before calling a strike. A strike, they point 1 TY out, also involves a delay in final settlement. x Louie, 11 org er Ni = oll op | Seattle medical audience, said in effect: who chilled their souls in youth. Yet To prevent delay on the part of the umpires, Basil Tat funer makes his home in Co||. “I have been particularly impressed by | under proper guidance and encouragement, Manly suggests that the arbitration boards be compelled a || vena, Ga the importance of the physician’s attitude | these same incompetents might have trie *to hand down a decision before being permitted to leave wel, To Semin Witn i || with reference to heart disorders. I have | umphed over personal defects of a really their jury room. Juries, by the time all evidence and tes- YD Uke A UTTLe ot: FP oe. *\seen many sufferers from heart disease, | crippling sort 3 » timony have been taken and the case summed up,by both Civic SERVICE tt! “t What should a gentleman wear| abandoned by their attending physicians as Pessimism, in fine, is one of the costliest > Sides, usually have a fairly clear opinion of ho® justice sy when he visite a Turkish bath hopeless, show marked improvement under | of human vices It is a failing which all ae be meted out. There is no reason why umpires in aye suitable treatment and live in comfort thru | should avoid, for their own sake and for apital disputes could not be equally prompt. If they " eee a varying number of ars. the sake of everybody with whom they Pa here ae pol - - many of} “Consequently I am satisfied that no ine | come frequently in contact. It blights, it ~ laos prendre tap Gothen trl bs is justified in pronouncing case of heart! handicaps, it kills. eS inve | rhe hemmed and hawed too long, public opinion would quickly 2 Tepeal the system. | ~—- Foch has accepted a nomination for senator. The | paths of glory often lead but to the mire of politics. Bi court of California ordinance requiring amento te Which, res has up their rian take a course in tL, N Raver Ur mene | *FINKY coat. — Adaline sinelloesiianbn a, bookkeeping ; ane mark Chicago Tribune, is the | ee praising merelf—he wa first real victor ne. wets 7 Our Speed of Progress NE ads lay Sraeb ‘otnareceven Oe iniremann] oot? the wets all - I am debtor both to the cae Sees FC p eA We are moving fast. ta a: wahert? qualia conte thal * have gone so high that ta ’ The fact is indicated by the fact that the men who in-| o- record to the Romans. |° shioned geriteman who used i oe and introduced the telephone and electric light are What js the largent secret society | 6. | 20l Now this was somewhat of @ con the pea’ - - 9 hogy ge ‘still actively among us. In, the United States?--E. 0. ¢ eee 1 the greatest |femflon for Paul to make, but it wi#|for breakfast can no longer aff | The other day in Washington a gray-haired man in the , her missionary ir ory uet another sign of his bigness xo much wast iddle sixties, fast on his feet and in his head, stepped up de am, ome QUESTIONS WE CANNOT He had b t TRYING He might have sald that he was) texans ER to the public telephone in one of the hotels and gave a 4 ANSWER be somenedy: grant: He: ance wicter = “ ve — pa. thal 9 - ' The young woman at the switchboard gave some facial eee - nd sanan ¥ fnve coger ae yew But whe was qu t . t owe anything indication of irritation, took the receiver from her ear, “BITE THE BUBBLE” to brass band. Don't you think | youns me to know me anybod pked at it, readjusted the band over her head and said) t¢ improperly constructed or tm 5s sae ak eas te alii teat - whould call ft an elastic band wetter, | and knew his ow whe a ma . Mem ne the 2 properly used, the bubbling drinking| often the constipation ie really due! ’r, f i a pan re vy sr a prand generally shows—he looks it _ “I wish I had the man here who invented this thing.” | fountain ake beh Gamaber shennan Sel to take af enerciee, copelaliy exer-| a ig Nap Boral g ae anything Rs ip eatiencns poe Be nda nae who » actually great get n t The inventor of this type of operator's headpiece was | heaith than the common drinking cise of t atominal muscles, Or! aty husband went to the cellar the | his bigness—he cen afford to leave pany taprhss Shaan ter Mbooe beciehavalin adage: <7 before the young woman. | An. tnepestor of the United Statenler “reeetces” In the food By | me, ;vemne: aaving he wee going | thet to other people. neon te Gthbowledyh it. | his gray-haired man, still active, had installed the | Public Health service took m seat) “roughage in moant especially the bes old Fag) out of a barrel. Did} It rarely happens that @ man) Even the commonest man has had} SEATTLE «4 he barrel of a revolver?—| doen't get credit for what he 18) an experience which may be usefu SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JOHN SPARGUR, Conductor d’s first telephone exchange in Boston in 1877. fepeqndt teres ian J rp con gendone yy a bean and other bulky portions | sir—6 lena @bak Seb Gonpstnetiy tor Ay 1 jon and wateh he | of Oug food, so valuable to stimulate -* ts . . ene=tae Tito the man who is eager to learn. was the man who displayed to Alexander Graham) way in which it was weed. Porty. | the Semal’ pertetaltio action get the Cc oaflp Latta hang ay busbana| "het be ts there's. nothing. more’ iiemniastion the first commercial application of his own invention. | seven aitterent persons, of whom 11 | Intestines . value of a woolen scarf my husband) somebody once said that © man|or instructive than human experi | gave me for Christmas? It has on |i, reaponsibié for his face at forty.| ence his man was Walter D. McKinney, now of Columbus,| ere men, 22 were women and 14) Q. For 20 years IT have broken ij: 4 gold pin and peveral thousand were children, used the bubbling | up all colds with good whinky. With | puria——-Mrs. A. D. What he i* has by that time be Jt was a sage who said that the! ~ . . - . fountain ha at ie the ne . come indelibly stamped upon it. His! oy Mather the direction of Thomas A. Edison, he wired the| tn sit cst every case the lipe were | enter: What ts the next best] Which makes the more noise, a/ come Indes Moe ee ta tet] cice study of man ts man public building ever lighted completely by electricity | piaced almost compietely around the| A. A glans of very hot lemonade Skah Longue oF the tongue © Ol le of ens. : Rela Parle Meo 2 gos aT K ‘old Bijou theatre of Boston, in 1882. metal bell from which the water| just before retiring. euptiemented|@ 4g The man whe bes the berdest| i ee oe hi spurted and one small boy seemed with a mustard foot bath, is often time to get to the front is he who cnouen Se" audeemun dct anes ae Me Hall E . cleat i he Wale titel 30 emule a: {Mant Sttestion HOUSEHOLD HINTS eT aon whe | enough to understand that even the any he reason Boston was selected for the first commercial | severai cf the men were obviously! Q Mow can I keep my tongue|, CoM Water ix much slower than | % always telling others that he 26) ry.called heathen could teach him cation of the telephone was that it formed the hub of chewing tobacco Jean? It is frequently coated with | tin coming to a boil cerves the Ciel Beet ee eed nor | STetning about, Gad j THE FIFTH POPULAR Never beat an egg with a grum.|!* almost invariably invited-< No sect or creed has a monopoly CONCERT SAT., JAN. 10 FRENCH HORN SOLO BY very large number of small New England communities,| Of ‘he 47 people, four were cols light substance, expecially after A ored, three looked as though they | mealn. What does this indicate, and there were at the time nearly 300 Separate EXPFeSS | might have tuberculosis, and three| what can I do to correct the trouble?) A® Akron Inventor has obtained a | class sheep I have which are not of this panies carrying package freight by wagon or by con-| had an eruption upon the face A. A coated tongue usually ies Patent on a rubber refrigerator He whe ss actually worthy of the] saja" Jom ones ania st with railroads to these towns—almost one separate| very person using the bubbling | cates a dinordered condition of the | Teams Will taste better If cracked front tne job will have the WAY! 1: wii} be recalled that Peter once drinking fountain should bear in| gasto intestinal track: that is the“! & small hammer before they |opened to him—others instinctively | said: “God is no respecter of per- etick kicked—back to the foot of the! of wisdom about religion. “Other er for each route or town. caied ine tho Gea kod k m for him ? ‘ c at the objec rie nan stemach and intestin ~ ‘e cooked step aside to oo edt one: B Charl ") The first practical use of the telephone was in connect-|{usice in ta precent the intorchanie | Con tea ea testines. | Constipa Ten Will not pour $f aprinikion With | mer ts ee en ant there by waale:| Grune, MB: Geary BANS be Cane les E. Tryner up these separate express companies with the mer- of mouth secretions. When mucus| trouble, Overeating amd tack of eq | benmoate of oda “ about himself Sesh ony Oe, weaken Semeare s creating and lack of ex ing a fuses about hi \ ness, is accepted with Him.” | Tickets on Sale at Sherman, who commonly patronized them. and other matter becomes attached |ercise are sometimes to blame. If yi ke 1 am debtor to the barbarians.”) without the experiences of those! Clay's Piano House introduction of general telephone exchange service | {°, (neil! 1k sometimes requires con. will send me your address 1| TURN HIM OVER TO THE | Not onfy wan Paul slow @b0Utl who have preceded us there would consypesmapanl oy : fo o remo and you a bulletin dealing with D - ¥ —~ | be no" knowled or proj ito Boston was very slow rong ee aaed os | aarnete tse uta Getting WHEN] Ay grace otek with and a| Lage go bay Baste Preoch, pas [Dene nnewiedae co crepe. At GST CC Even by giving free service at first its use could not be a slowly urrent of water. — | right living heart to feel srith ail. Gomnecting the | ter” Upiewn, 1416 Shake aves Gowe-|o'curL, te Mass: cf SE Busnes N AS ; for merchants and bankers claimed it was an)!» us! Bing soeninin | Ts Sa. Ordinary case’ at igrip| ‘we 4 wine et uate stuffnews ret ais Becend ave. sagen ag’ Apt Reman eat ON THE COAST ne rule at ite the bub- | communicable ; limited to bo class of nation | How? New York (N. Y) Tribune ignified means of transacting business. tie” ke tae snauadaae tak on ~ "It was not until telephones were also installed free in! part ot the fountain and under no|menieatic ae ® the homes of those who already had them in their business litions #h: 114 the fountain bel colds. Much b ary grip are com 5 oa: nino mont common | New York booksellers sy men Brai 156 fe Sees ott se Bemboidery — and business men made accustomed to them by ing the mouth or for ex-|#pread of the disease thru germa| their children. it, of course, still communication, that their commercial use was jaPrayed into the air by coughing, | SV “em to their wives, Picot Edgin x as ~ ne paths of tranamiasion shonid| Cleveland girls have formed a Buttons goon ; > , RE! »e borne in mind. Handa rolled club whose members promise not to jes Made It is easy to guess which will be the goat when the \*——— —*———————-* | srt probably play a a propose to : Ryo Button Ho dion lion and the lamb lie down together. Q. Does the drinking of much | than Is pleasant to consider, Com. | We notice they no promises re Knife and Accordio ~ , milk and cream serve to bring on|m0n drinking cups, common tow garding the other years Plaiting 1, unclean glasses —— - Jishes all demand attention. | But, as the cashier remarked, “I Dut co,inecuaner corartea. “1! BAUER & CO. TOMORROW “tt hcconmaaeng aa +s -| Tailors? and Dressmakers” Supplies column or. by A short time ago we attended a meeting called for the | ree, Oe onan shibatid Wearth Ave. Oeil pu ‘of solving a local problem. N the 9th of January, in 1514,| i ly talked at once trying to give his opinion. hs Anne of Bretagne, Queen conatipation? Commanding Silence to thr toms of & purely pers to preseribe for individu oO Address: at aattimae old Age and has returned to her home after (siting Mrs — eee Glasses ington (D. @) ‘That is, everybody except one man. He sat and listened. seg gpa cg ford gl ; 7 ) Chi ‘rds the ends of the conflab, this man indicated that | r¢4.4°"1n lag oh alggps Meeta tna pide e re elicious on steak— —and on almost every other kind of food—in soups, gra- vies, sauces, on fish, game, poultry and all kinds of hot or cold meats, It’s the ripe ‘ow fhe was about to speak. Immediately all were silent. They|ana shortly after was married to] Once im about ten thou to hear what the silent man had to say. Charles VIII, the young king of|® «irl really ¢ ; _ fyidently this man was a thinker, and the talkers knew | ""*e°*: * marriage which reconciled|* Young man st ' that what he had to say would be worth listening to. eras Ge eech Atte ta And, it was. : aR ; |death of Charles in 1498 Anne mar - The most convincing argument in the world is intelligent) ried his successor to the throne of . Nobody pays much attention to the parrot. But, | france, Louls XIr nd times ket angry when! Is a Kise If you know of anybody who in tends to pay $10 for a restaurant | chair in which to sit tonight, please send his name and address to us all look with respect upon the wise old owl. seth eng eh at Jaunary ss " if mae tal Francis Drake, the English navi tomato flavor of Det Monte stingy with your talk. 2 gator, died. Drake, who was born many republicans are throw The gradual decrease ; " 4 their hats in the ring that the Catsup that makes it so deli- which should asd in 1545, commenced his nautical ca of ocular pow cious. Good cooks keep it on the table and use it in the kitchen as one sure means of adding zest and variety to national convention will look like a hat shop. mpanies ag not be consid trary to nature any more than it is for the reer at an early age distinction He served The devil will be put out of business when somebody invents a way to put a kick in virtue. i ed con wkins against the Aiea Sugar is selling at 37 cents a ward undertook sev expe-| i pound in Germany and the only Z eee es ditions against the Spanish colonies If your gums are sore, sloug ° n gray, the Jin America. On one of these expe | ing and bleeding, yeu Hough I) thing {Dat prevent | the eatin sid en iy HP every-day meals. é As Women See It tons "he continued swap Pyorshea, svcd” way "ig || fame fr, tuying east MMM ieee ancien 0 Send fora cony of Dez Mowre around the world. Drake died finally |f €48¢, Which is a menace to good || ey ppt eperotibanie! weaken Recipes of Flavor” and learn new ‘ nal on the coast of America in one health. We are the only pen. |)” uses for DEL MONTE Catsup as well as the many other delicious tists in the Resides, vances, the feal faculties be used less and less, gements with the Spanish| The French are premiers in thrift. American soldiers 1.) e | H brought back a world of information on that subject to tao into burope tn attrivutea ‘tol their women folks. Our women have adopted the French nim | idea in some ways. In others they are doing their own) ©» the 9th of January, tn 1861 pioneering. And to good effect. the steamship Star of the West wae Greater and greater grows the number who do their | <0) Py th" Inderal government trom preliminary shopping thru the newspaper advertising torcements for columns. They stroll thru the stores and shops, page by |Charlerton harbor. When the Star ge. They pick out a bargain here, and another one there. | "he West reached Charleston she | en, and not until then, do they actually use the tele + Tt Fs ab Py dienyl ot _ phone. Or, better still, visit the stores in person. obliged to ‘cure eane this, wpe Thal They are all set. They know what they are doing and|firet actual gun fire of the civil they are on their way. Living costs are such and the|™4" value of money also such that the thrifty woman now-|, 1" 7402. 00 the ath of January, | days does not hesitate to walk an additional block or 80 the Wrench au Napoleon ttt, het _ to save on almost any item she wishes to purchase. The He way imprisoned $e i dle vas newspaper advertising pages are her business barometer, the Chetesy of Wilhelmshohe near remains home when it shows high. She trots right |r ie er iract th was allowed: to} to the bargain counters when it says low. huyet. Mage. toed ae ive | The American woman has learned the thrift game. quietly until hiv dowth, his en thwest who specialize in this dreaded disease Examination and extimate tree Special care taken of children's teeth, Reasonable dixcount Union men and their families The day after the coal atrik my oulja board told me the strik would be ended in three days writes W. & T. “Can you tell me what's the matter with the board We don't know, But a ouija is another of those good sub- | canned fruits, vegetablesand food specialties packed under the DEL MONTE label. It is free. to and the eyes more and i more, All work guaranteed 15 years Artificial aid is there fore to be expected and should always be resort ed to at the first indica tion of falling eyesight Call and let us fit you with the glasses your eyes require. Seattle Optical Co. Optometrists and Mfg. Opticians Est. 1290, 715 2nd Ave. pplies and rein stitutes for coal, ‘ort Sumter in United Painless Der tists INC. 608 Third Ave, Cor, James St. Nedroom or Desk Lamp FREE turn to the Lighthouse Announcement on 4 of this Phone Elliott 3633 Hours: 8:30 a, m. to 6 p, m ANN Sundays, 9 to 12.

Other pages from this issue: