The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 9, 1920, Page 6

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She Seatile Star a | EDITORIALS — $He On the Issue of Americanism There Can ‘FEATURES Mc labor-capital disputes is sémetimes referred to as “Labor Courts.” This name is inaccurate and misleading. It ‘¢louds the real purpose of the proposed system. Three distinct parties are involved in big industrial dis- labor, capital and the public. They form a gigantic concern. It is not proposed, when the three part- disagree, to concentrate the umpires’ attention on the jor partner, labor. All three partners would be given hearing and on an equal footing. The tribunals of the industrial referees should not be bor courts. They should not be capital courts. They uld not be courts named in honor of the third partner, ublic. They should be neither for nor against any of the hree parties to the dispute. They should be composed of a of sufficient impartiality and inherent justice to guar an open-minded hearing and an unbiased decision. "A\To insure getting such men for industrial referees, Basil Man proposes that they be elected, subject to recall.) > PERE gerard ald the wrong man slip in and be unmasked in some} veiope in childhood and ¢ "specific dispute, he could be eliminated by the right of| careful attention on nge, which Manly would place in the hands of each) P*"*n'» Foca ati sage rty whose case would come before the umpires. I Gone it te often & caanne cohesion court is a court of justice if it is antagonistic to or) when ieft untreated it may lead to irly in favor of either party to a dispute. Particularly | deformity of the mouth and now this apply to the proposed industrial umpires. |and’ to. permanent. weshsloes chest | FEET | Aside from paralysis, clubfoot or! resulting from injuries, | t foot troubles are due te fitting hoes, liking of and weakness of I NASAL CATARRE, ENLARGED TONSILS, MOUTH ot part y treated, in A tradesman advertises Inealled for Clothing.” | Most of our 1920 model men's garments are entirely un- called for. mproper —From The Stare and Stripes, Washington, D.C. | India’s Home Rule : ercine, en len in the forepart of leg that support the arch off the foot. Property fitting shoes of cor rect shape with a straight inner will help to correct weakfoot corns, callouses and pain Often half a loaf is better than no bread at all. Some}, tatives of India may take this view of the profferred | rw » me rule” for India. What the British government offers not home rule. It is not as much home rule as Canada nor Australia, nor South Africa. But it is more than)” « India has had since she has been a part of the British em-|»«! and there is promise of a “fully responsible govern-|"" mt” at some future time. | | For the present the franchise is restricted to the mi nority, and the lower castes will have no voice in their| operable cancers, and para np more than when matters were shaped at)"™°"" of ‘Sontag lk gh ons, ANSWERED * cure for fibroid tur tadium | t of various dise however, in the tre used in the t Jers, especial ment of in © treat Wh ire for This, very likely, will do little to check the feeling | ¢,),, *115 4 tumors, the results of this umrest among the many millions, but it will, so the}: ent, especially in the hands itish government seems to think, halt the tide of dis- ; skilled in etentaiaering it who porseases a sufficient content among the higher castes, the educated, property- owning natives. fuse ’_ By giving this half loaf of home rule to India, Great | y of radium, have been quite rkable © Britain probably has pushed forward by a decade or two| @ 1 have had erysipelas twice the coming Indian revolution. In other words, the British|!" '"° rek*, Wien ioe one |getting it aga Erysipe is caused by oo merely has postponed the independence of . | A Some veterans’ associations seem to be run for rev- enue only. -From ‘The Bt Stripes, Washington, D. ¢ hanged for misdemeanors, but was pay the king, After the death of Cha I, the Long parliament impeached the archbishop and, overruling the | king's pardon, condemned him to be | beneaded humiliating At Chicago, recently, 30,000 CHILDREN §/ ‘ath than hanging. a were examined as to the state of their TEETH | sien, ieatec or the Green Moun —and 95 Per Cent WERE IN NEED OF DEN- Jf}'sin doy90" woe born at titentiia TAL SERVICE. Recent inspection in one Cleveland school | prise sitack on Fort. Tioonderogs showed that of the 846 children examined J Giien eee deciuun *ALL SAVE THREE HAD DISEASED TEETH. To Ethan Allen be the name “Contin army. In demanding tl r of Ticonderoga, he We Americans live well, and eat foods which are not conducive to the preservation of the teeth. DENTAL ATTENTION is often CALLED *OR—and shouldn’t he DELAYED . . ‘ ‘ cor ne 1 —especially in the case of GROWING boys iene, wacnied tor the new army ad and girls. i : government in place of the former No charge for examinations here! Come in ff ame of “provincial | On the 10th of Ja y in 1870) and let us advise as to the present state of your TEETH. the Standard O11 Company was in-| |corporated at Cleveland under the ry Py th of lo. Joh locke Modern methods—high-class dentistry [ster id" aiectal’ eramaent. tote ' —low prices. These we offer you. Je i rs were Henry} po | r, Bi el Andrews, Stephen | Harkness and William Rockefeller ‘Tho company was capitalized at} | $1,000,000, | Laboring People’s Dentists | 2” sss. on the roth of January | 3. RB, VAN AUKEN, Manager jthe Harvey process for manufac: | for years at 8. E. Corner First and Pike, Phone Main 2505 Bf) 'iine | «teel armor plates wits PREVENTABLE ADENOIDS, | fe as possible contact with pus in any form, for the strepto coccun in very com caso of eryxipelas of the face, the germs may come f up when we're being counted. | But, as the telephone = girl amore | marked, when she removed the Accept “California” Syrup of Figas|taire, “Ring off. only—look for the name Ca nia on} aslo the package, then you are © you s the gncnee, even zon are eure vou’ Sidelsky Gets Winch Iver ant howe cee, Seven Days : 7 dren love ite deliciow taste.| © ge pane 460 this lotus of Here’s where honestly made shoes prove their ull dir n The Star. value; day in and day out, whether it rains or ut $0 per month; 3 month gy ee sion Gurcide, the state, . j bas Seas! Dy rviersty "Be bat" week Be No Compromise a ‘iknats os Rie a fi ae Bias eh SS eres Be —e 2 — 2 \\EVERETT TRUE —By CONDO WE'LL SAY SO : = ‘+ | Capital Punishment JOST BECAUSE YOUR EMPLOYES 1 HAPPEN Maeterlinck . Do NOT BELONG TO SOME —__.-] TO KNOW athasat’ Packae you ue BY DR. FRANK CRANE Something has gone askew in the calculations of Wash- |STRONG UNION, YOU NEITHER “WHO “OU ARE ‘ei 9,000 Are (Copyright, 1919, by Prank Crane) ington’s state legislators. Just a year aus, thee, retest PAY ATTENTION TO Arey AND THAT You're thought capital punishment and congratulated each other en- | WRETCHED WORKIN t s acicatihies — aisle a saa ; I alll tie alae : viahon’ 4: Me astically. Crime, they agreed, would automatically [CONDITIONS NOR THEUR aoe tenoeny in remark Recently sph \ tat American shores is in Vee Diese Re pheno Comedt subside. Fear of ae giboet a eg ne ack EQvUEsSTS Loo AND 1 WANT TO bly = that many i New York, the American metropolis, is! sought to put into poetry the forernost Gerers eye acid ‘ ona be sinned sg ‘i " be es IMPROVEMENT cai WARN ‘Wou- ne one doing him honor Hi play “The Blue | thought of his age, as did Milton in “Parae No ‘one has been hanged, altho murder has been a popu “nh t mn ct tay Metropolitan Opera Hou 7 Society gives | The lasting, persistent, unescapable Jar diversion for mor id-minded. souls, ee eS ee him a Blue Bird Ball, There is to be a | quest of all souls is for spiritual truth. on The noose dangles theoretically from the scaffold while rown where the Burglar loots, | Blue Bird Week. a a are all Pilgrims into bsgrfin rai land. Dur men kill each other in its figurative shadow. Yet no one fown where tt {rer shoot What does Maeterlinck mean to us? Is | undying hunger is for t 1 unknown, — has been required to slip his head in the slip-knot and re- iat mourder ring! he but another fad Is the approval of his Maeterlinck utters this common longing. ceive in turn a broken neck " »| work but a pose? Or is he really a sig- | His mannerisms, his choice of form, are Perhaps it was well that the legislators have had a : ; nificant factor in our civil ion, i his | shrewdly chosen, they pique curiosity. chance to observe their handiwork. Honest lawmakers, Five hundred — Hse work that of a true master, has he really But he is no charlatan. He is full of : perhaps, believed that legalized hanging would decrease pleas something to say? ; ht practical, sound sense. His “repent is & ¢ e. Honest law makers now must certainly admit that Maurice Maeterlinck is a rare combination | “trtasure of the humble. His conclusions, } capital punishment has not solved the problem. Crime r = of bp igs tang He is a spiritual seer the, vagua:tonk tonned por light. wii ‘ 7 ws iad ¢ i a eenee or n of }jand a clever artist. e is erworldly, yet world vise, te for 12 oT ada have stormed and rippled cease traffic, don't erowd, boys, bon He is a lineal descendant, thru the spirit, And all the fineness, the nobleness, and nigh Tf capital punishment had remained illegal in this state Rest CASY, pe By tor pe: Pagel nr wg ergie'y Rey oe coe from laying that Other ' eve: ry ne "| i >. & m » y y | > b ci § . Ss. ‘along rg ldap gg ge hy rll: te sh Ser A & Same us *|/the contemplative anchorites of a former The great task of every man is to make ‘ Mitted to hang them?” | xX WON'T Dr. MOA. Matthews has given us| 4ge. Only his probings into the Infinite are | lilies grow out of mud, love supplant lust, . Hanging has been restored. But murder has not been cL AY nd the | carried on, not in the crudities of medieval the enthusiasms of the ideal dominate the , = z ? | nned as| theology, but ir? the deftness of art. He | passions of the flesh. . And, as a French J SE See | |T ON uu inment|is a Church Father, functioning in the the- | philosopher observed, whatever removes the Ww ree rehé be president? Perh | ed the o atre, in literature. NE satisfactions of life away froni the body hy should Pershing want to be president Te. mittee of 100 to occupy reser He has broadened the term “Faith” to | and over the mind is culture. 1 | because no man ever rose so high that he didn't ha t cents. He is also on the committes|{nclude all life. He has unloosed the ‘America is tremendously ideal. It is ¢ ite look up to see the stars. Pershing has only four on 18 ete lterm “Faith” to include all life. He has | least sordid and materialistic of nation§ 1 ee mnonlders. From The Stare and Stripes, Washington, D very deg w spiritual craving in man from dogma and | Many deny this and see only our money; : ~ when Mrs. institution and expressed it in the drama making and our partisanships. But it i lisa asin atch Rieab dack and the essay. / true none the less. No nation is more ™ ‘ ° . | aces os ices laa In the back of every human brain, bad or capable than ours of ideal enthusiasms. We : A Misleading Name | | good, small or great, lie the great unsolved | must not forget that the War to us was | Whe is questions of God, Life, Death, Immortality, a Crusaac. for the Religion of Democer q ee 3 SOM gentleman Conscience. nd And no ....tion will welcome more hones | The proposed system of industrial.umpires for adjusting come tax? They are the eternal Sphinxes by the, and appreciate more truly such a man ag stands in front of ington dining re0e 4 toothpick he got at Mike's Soup | — |MESSENGER “BOY” | road, Maeterlinck. All in the party are experienced huntamen. Rey. Neweoomer is an ox cellent shot, and prior to accepting the Lorain pastorate two yearn ago |he ministered to the First Church of Chriet at Findlay, O., where he held first honors in the Findlay Trap | Shooting club. He also had a class lin crap shooting In hin Bible school Lorain, ©., Timer Herald, eee ‘The French Academy has been at |work on a dictionary for 41 years and haw reac nly F. Still, that’s a bit faster than Burleson o- ONE OF THE MOST WIDELY) USED KIND FOR SALE—Piano, A little old/ and tinpanny, but intact and in tune Square, Dellverd for $25 in advance | Address the Lamp Pub. Co., Garri json, N. Y.—Advertisement in the Peeksill, N. Y.. News .- The ‘w han away Wad DRIVES OWN AUTO boomed his business we reca | We Union m Ker who ¢ The man who rocked the boat | ere te own autamc The man who didn't know it was] storeover, he has three other ma WITHOUT NASTY QUININE a. iN chines, a bank punt that rur oe with | into five figures and a house H b uto. | store at Middleburg Schoharie Don't stay etuffea up! Quit blow k wood alcohol. | county, where he ie chairman of the|ing and snuffling! A dose of 7-6 | : a “7 board of elections Pape’s Cold Com taken every r : Fiverything has Ite good points.| : AILMENTS There's wood alcohol, frinstance, No|, W'liard G. Shufelt, the messenger | two hours until three doses are Cold Compound” is the tiation: 4 — died n|man becomes a slave to it. A man|!n auestion. is 64 ant | wken, usually ke up a severe| quickest, surest relief known and | trepto coccus,” whict drink a bottle of it and then | ?*P? fe rant Pps rot we old and ende« ype misery costs only a few cents at drug stores, — ‘rh ovata. ek < ne 3 ve it alone for a hundred years brag ness fo a ™, The very first dose opens your|It acts without assistance, tastes in the akin. It ts, efore, tm-| ©: 858 cai eburg and contenting Bim | iogged-up nostrils and the air pass © quinine. . j gertant fivet to aveld tnjurtny tne We GM A WERRer wee 95) Set Wet dong nothing s* Shufelt | ’ “ * yey a q s prefers to work. And delivering | . r a 7 > ' thin, and second ‘to avoid ax much | AN AMBIDENTROUS SHOOTER |Prefern 10° work, And aih"™ISTAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS 3 viitiliekootiiede found in Tn the only om the discharge accompanying a cold in the head questions of gene: enty to hygiene, prevention of disemer, Impossible for him to tions of @ purely personal nature, of te prescribe for individual diseases, Address: INFORMATION Kprron, Washington, 1. © “OVRUP OF Feo” CHILD'S. LAXATIVE at tongue! Remove poisons from stomach, liver and bowels One of the Elks’ club members or dered bread pudding at luncheon the other day, and when a fellow member inquired what led him to do such al thing gave a most sati y ex planation “The waiter told me there was a/ raisin in it 1d Burglara, robbers, pickpocket lother gentlemen of that class up $25,000,000 in New York yea When an industry can show} figures of that size it Is about time! for it to demand a high protective | tariff, | ity this} One thing a Give it wit each bottle er! You must say Californt shines, they’re getting hard usage. LOOK FOR THE NAME ‘BONEDRY ON EVERY SOLE We've made the BONE-DRY shoe for hard work—Oak Tan Soles—finest heavy leather— best of workmanship, and if it costs you a little bit more, you get it back many times over in long wear and solid comfort. Are You “Fussy” ‘ you drink? Milk This is one thing you certain Ston in at any of the stores listed below are hae nadie and see for yourself the kind of shoe’ you get harder you are to when you buy the BONE-DRY. impertant point ; BONE-DRY SHOE MFG. CO. Seattle, Wash. of utmost cleanii ness, the more you will be satisfied with In Choosing an OPTOMETRIST reliability is the first CONSIDERATION Our Standing Should ¢ YOUR CONFIDE) venti hermer, 10: Bros. (two viet Avg » lown Ave, at Riverside ‘Bone DRY Shoe Cileabad Preserves Shoes and Leather Men who Work and Walk Con prareerty PASTEURIZED MILK ELLIOTT 223 Motte: ~~ For

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