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The Seattle Star 3 months, $5.00, in the the state | REGISTER _ ‘Two days more remain for registration. | you are a citizen and can qualify for a vote this state, register and then vote. — “In registering at this time, you will not qualify for the city election but also the presidential, state and congres ional tion. You will not have to re-register) i cast your ballot in the city election. On February 17,: two candidates for or, six councilmanic candidates for the year term, two candidates for the two- term and two for the one-year term, be chosen. On March 2, the final elec- will be held. hom do you prefer for mayor?) Whom 9 you prefer for the council? You cannot : that preference in a substantial way| Aless you register. ° DO IT NOW. Py California women maintain that half of the Western tion to the democratic natienal convention at San isco should be composed of women. Dealers in md chocolate caramels will be much stronger han those who sell campaign cigars d the War is the only great power still in the so plan United States War. 3 the other big nations once arrayed against Germany, exchanged ratifications of the peace treaty with pne-time enemy and for them—Germans, too—the War has ended. not for the United States of America! | weeks and months now the United States senate has over the peace treaty. It has talked. It has debated. played politics. It has done everything but tackle se treaty in real earnest, with an honest desire to the best interests of the American people and their thruout the world. Altogether too much time effort has been given to this senatorial jockeying. nations, Great Britain, France, Japan, Italy, Bel- have embarked upon the path of peace. They have diplomatic and business relations with Germany, oples know where they stand, and business in those can go ahead without any misgivings, without any that their government will kick a hole in their care- laid plans of commercial intercourse with each other with Germany. Senate handicaps American business, and when it business in this way it halts the progress of tan labor, too. It slows up national advance when ocks international trade. It tells the manufacturer, the fter, the financier, the workman to sit down and wait tters over reservations mild, and reservations and more particularly while the “bitter-enders” to the bitter end. In the meanwhile British, French panese business has an open door to the storehouse national trade. us end the war. Let us get out of the mire of peace ‘politics. The American people are not in a mood d more time watching a handful of senators “fight to the bitter end.” The American people want to get the war. They want the “bitter-enders” to end their warfare. American people want the peace treaty o ti ratified— tty position; let the administration senators aban- no-reservations attitude. That'll bring them each other, and nearer the people. Clearly the ma ty of Americans favor a peace treaty compromise. They the League of Nations so badly that they are eager it with any reservations which do not destroy e’s usefulness, and which will permit future efforts ded to perfect the league’s purpose, and its machinery Ff attaining that purpose. d the war, and catch up with the rest of the world! D | ( When called on for a speech at the banquet of the 10 Opera association, Mary Garden responded by ting Harold F. McCormick, president of the associa- 'e seewhere Mury is going to be in even greater and as an after-dinner “speaker” than she has as an opera star. Foundations Giving — Ci Way nine has been forced to compromise on cardinal prin- of Bolshevism. He is giving the ownership of their products. Long ago, he had to “the bourgeoisie” into the factories in the persons h-skilled foremen. compromises were natural and inevitable. The Rus. nt didn’t seem to appreciate the difference be “the state” taking his all and the czar taking it. | factory men couldn’t produce without skilled bos and direct. The Russian peasant, like most other had a strong desire to have what was his, and, in e of factory production, the attempt to standardize failed, as such attempts always do, inoff, mouth-piece for Bolshevism, says: *Full communism is only possible if other countries ac- E the same economic basis. They will either follow our cs ®, or, if Russia is before her time, she will have Tevert to capitalism. We have been forced to take a mid-} s course for the present.” : They're going to indict the ex-kaiser for “breaking the most sacred rules of human conscience.” They ght to be able to smother Bill in a large, heavy anket like that. Justice, says the Sultan of Turkey, is the foundation of all human society. Don't worry, old man. You're go- ing to get a large chunk of it. It is fitting that congress should appropriate a rec- breaking sum for the postoffice department. Burle- appropriated record-breaking authority. organ, of London, says that men start thinking they stop drinking. Where do our leading poli- get theirs? g of sedition, isn’t lynching an effort to over- Ww the government by violence? . Let there be compromises by both factions of “bit-| ” Let Lodge and Borah recede from their kill-! Russian peasants | .g | economy THE SEATTLE STAR—MO) WE'LL SAY SO oo , How of srrair A MONTH TO MAKE PT AROUND AND SAVE A LITTLE Fr, 13 Fb MY 81° M John St) vironment afte a primal oF wu is bh a roe I bu from the Lyx food values instead of excennl 1 thus m well on about altho I would er Add t and laund: star prices, a falr m th and pastries ducatios axsist in t fo unger « family for an Investment « erty I chacks i the ‘ scription 1 must lent mi and my salary t been attractive b wearing worth of girl thus | Omi rn an in | peaditure. | start now all th while the rew ber that ud h The fellow who drank it put it on his hair ed Staten ts are tragic might BRIBERY you mustn't } Make him b » won't de ment ourler- Journa it unless I kiss him intervals.” — Louisville manager ed t remarked » buszer, calling I never pressed have preswd a but STILL, YOU MUST ADMIT HE DOESN'T ACT A BIT LIKE A TIRED MAN Lewis, acting president of John L the miners leading ountry’s looks delegates why he nt and go to he mat on the back of his n and .»moked a cigar.—Cleveland (O.) Plain Dealer After you" and you want want anything, and worked and saved ly running up you want and ¢ . OUR SEX 18 ETTING TREATMENT AT LAST Anoth ve worked and saved years rything you find to get hat f yo continu thing event of the evening was 4 mice yus shower ¢ for their san, Glenn, whose marriage to Miss Mayme Foster will take place in the near future—Galesburg (I1l.) tepublican ven The average housewife cauld give the United government a | handicap and easily win out in any eee TO PUBLIC OPINION that little | BOWING | “What's trunk? in steamer “Emergency costumes chorus of 40." | “Emergence | “Yes, *0c own that's so pu for our | siona we ntrike jeal the girh have to put on an extra bead or | two, Birmingham Age-Herald. a { But, as the Jing the coat |is cold.” florist remarked dur. hortage, “My hothouse Roger Babson, the famous statis ticlan, thinks that If mar prop. erly developed the dol today instead of being worth would be worth $10. re veloped. Perhaps what was soused, wer ot 50 enite faid de he me Be that as it may, Jack Rose { a flower salesman in Cleveland, and I. Gold buys Liberty bonds Youngstown, O. oe Sir Oliver Lodge, England, brings the mation that man from a monkey. We for one agree with him. But we are quite willing to argue the question with him if he |denies that man never descends to a monkey. . Just over from startling infor is not Th} descended | EVERETT TRUE —AND THE Reason Fore THAT VERY CONDITION oF WHICH —— J i wien eee anf QUESTION —— WHY 18 Weer, Let Me ASK YOU ANOTHER QUESTION —— WHT (9 (T—-— INDAY, JANUARY 26, 1920. On the Issue of Americanism Jhere Can Be Ng Compromise —By CONDO; Now, JOST WAIT f —— ir You CAN'T WAIT TLE A Feciow ANSWERS ONS QUESTION BEFORE You JAM IN ANOTHGR ONG — ? SCIENTIFIC DIAGNOSTIC METHODS Leyden living nea ath Me an but died He at Leyden. first neparat ophthalmology (the ne to give ce examination mnbined t the be with « ie, a influence led t which n to ap ald me Me ta Ch of. a letter ad To the most famou Hie maxim seal of ure jwas so far ficial dressed simply physician of was “Simplicity once sen m The f modern to emp 1 which mental and the patient rev the mind almost shown the bene the Pressure of the anol w may and appro. taken to ward off an analyzed and ye meth w ct n of wt phys Prychoanalynia Jepths of the patient the Xr hidden th mean tic at © a the ng is taken for examined; the of the estimated ndition of the nervous syaterh ked into, Tr finds the | grant activity ach is modern before Accurate diagnonia is of impor jance to the public health because FAIR | TOMORROW the 27th of Roya January Sovereign, in 1696, the first built in England fir For six |years the Royal Sotereign had t the most formidable ship afloat taxes levied for the building of this | Vessel had been a serious drain on |the purses of the people. In 1 27th of January Thomas English vine, died in priso: He was a man of great inteliect, but his fearie originality of thought brought |under the charge of plasphemy specific charge inst him i his allegorical tions of the scriptures 0% | large | was man destroyed by war a The on the Woolston, an n him The was A large fine imposed on him and being ur able to pay he was put in prison, where he died. On the 27th of January, in 1785, a charter waw granted to the Unk ty of Georgia, This was state university ws receive a but it was hot opened to students until #ixteen years later, | In 1807, on the 27th of January, the conspiracy f Aaron wr owas nunicated to congress yith of January, in 1842, earold eon of Ralph Waldo The poet found ex. his grief in his ex first the first com On th | the five Emerson died |preesion for quisite “Thre In 1880, on the 27th of January, the patent for an incandescent lamp. was first granted to Thomas Alva | Edison On the 27th of January, will II, of Germany, the present ex kaiser, was born at Berlin. He was the eldest son of Prince Fred- erick of Prussia and of Victoria, Vr 4 Royal of Great Britain, in 1859, interpreta: | an early and correct knowledge of the presence of a diseane affords op pe 4. The ane found infinitely greater of recovery than the h Is found late. Boerhaave rec ognized these facts in a general way applied them; in fact, according Rohifs, he the first who & chem examination of jaome of the bodily excretions ANSWERED | Q 2 have been tn ill-health for the pat seven years Recently my teeth hav®"commenced to pain me An X-rayfahows “rather gross bone absorption about th martina of the low nore and right bicusp What fs the cause of this, and « I ee a dentist or a doctor? Can a cure be effected? A an tunity to prevent its spr of tuberculosis which ance made The trouble In usually due to infection arising in the route It can be cured by proper rried out by canal treatment, fied dentist Q Recently I noticed a bald apot on my head the size of a half a dol jar. Can you tell the cause of this and =6hhow same be treated? A A number of different ¢ ons might reaponnible trifling affairs to simple i are of a more nd are merely a symp. anying @ grave constitu dition ould " be onie and treat serious character tom acco tional co: nly to hygiene, prevents Vem prot y personal nature, of to preseribe for individual diseases, Address INFORMATION FDTTOR nshington, INDIANAPOLIS IS SHINING UP | Preparing for Advertising Club’s Convention | INDIANAPOLIS, . @ Ind., Jan, 2 } (By United Press,)—Manufacturers merchants, business and advertising men thruout the United States are Already turning their attention to pIndianapolis as the city in) which probably of the greatest con- ns 1920 will be held—the f the Associated Ad- of the W Men from all parts of this country and the world will attend the conven tion, which will be held here June 6 to 10, and requests for hotel res ervations are already being received |from many citle | A tremendous campatgn to | Indianapolis” to the world has |started by more than 500 |apolis business men [pledged themselves to convention “the world’s during 1920." Speakers with a “two-hundred- dollar-a-minute” message are the of he ntion vertising Clubs nt n Indian- who have make the greatest dresses before the convention, EB. 'T, | Meredith, of Des Moines, Ia dent of the Associated Ad |has announced. “The convention is going to cost 0 a minute, and if a man talks minutes he must say something worth $5,000 or we do not care to have him talk,” President Meredith has announ An advertising plaza, erected along both sides of an Indianapolis street for several blocks, with crews of sign painters working from morning to night painting various advertising signs, will be a unique feature of the convention, » prest clubs, @ quali. | kind of men who will deliver ad-| American Propaganda BY DK. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Prank Crane) Get busy! | the live gospel of Americanism in the doubt- You who believe in this thing called | ful ridges of the battle. Americanism, this foree we name Demoe- The Anarchists and Sovietists and I. W. racy, this congeries of ideas and energies |W. and Bolshevists believe in- what they typified by Uncle Sam, speak up! believe in strongly enough to shout and If you in what you believe whisper and argue, in season and out of organize, out your missionaries season, apostles. And the only way to combat a bad Idea ‘age is by a good Idea. A cca Caen i the = To suppress and club and pall people of the earth, why don't Americans spend sheard, it’s like trying to put outs aim , wit prosene millions to send myriads to preach Amer. ith kerosene. es . fe Capitalists, wake up! icanism to at least the benighted heathen teachers, farmers, storekeepers, this has of our own land? : been the land of your opportunity, and if Abe ay et of pene huge clots of | you want it to be the same for your chil- population, in this country have little or no | dren, get busy, send dut your propagandists idea of what this Western World is about. si 4 ise . of progress. A man who manages a factory employing What shall we teach? 7,000 hands in New England told me the Teach that Democracy means Law, that other day that over one-third of his people | it means a fair fight and the will of the |cannot understand the English language. | majority; that it means Opportunity for And you may be sure if they don’t know | all, that it means No Class, that all talk your language they don’t know your history | of a Laboring Class and a Capitalist Cl nor your aims. is European sewage; that America means Tell them. the Co-operation of all, every man’s, every Print tons of tracts. Get the cleverest, | woman's lively interest in polities; public highest-priced authors to write them. See | spirit, devotion to the Common Good, Hard that they get into the hands of the workers. Send speakers. I know a do gifted Work for all, a Chance for every man, young preachers myself who are droning |a Square Deal for every family, and an away in comfortable churches, marking Education for every child. time, Oh, marking time! when they ought Wake up, America! You can beat the world and the devil at to be going from factory to factory, from steel mill to steel mill, blazing away with | Propaganda, if you will, for you have the ach! Propagandize! believe send in, and Lawyers, bankers, | goods. ” Raa carne Rae ei rae RES Gina Tea RT enc PRR Oe PhS a ce ok cer IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL TREATED LIKE DOGS Jother worships the almighty dollar,|going to lower their pride, nor will milter tas Whines known as Mr a prominent | this nation see its fighting men, who \uniae ee yard and get- 80d prosperous business man, but,| have ma nd saved our country, eer sale hes lieve me, they do not worship the|go hungry, not because they won't ee Peaaene ighty God, and, furthermore, are| work, but because they can't get oN pgp gyh lt not Americans. In either case, if | work sas hushands | their honor and humanity were pow-| And I wish to say, for the full Many der, they, wouldn't have enough to! benefit of all business men who sre t of the, blow their noses, h'ring foreigners and slackers for 17 and bs that ex-service men can hold, they we re-|#re not Americans, but as great an enemy to our country as any of the radicals, and, for my part, I'd as soon line up and fight elther class of these radicals as any Hun that ever lived, because they are as great an enemy as in "17 and "18 our enemy was be- fore us, But now we fight blind enemies that would ruin our country for the Almighty Devil or the Al- mighty Dollar. For my own part, I am married, and bave a good trade, but I can’t even get a steady job of any kind, and it isn't because I won't work. TI left home and heaven, and when I returned I met “hell” and starvation. If any one whose feel- ings | have infringed upon, wishes to say anything to me, I can always be found around the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ club, and I'll apologize to them just like we did to the Ger- mans. Respectfully yours, . AN EX-GOB. an re same their men, while are from $6.50 ¥ of these husbands kept ¢ nervice by working in the The women and work getting yard 18, husbands | w merely t ot Wh were urned, in no we left, back in heroes, but when 18 and "19, we were forced of cold-hearted do Ko to| we be bums, beggars and paupe jeve me, America and 100 per cent Americans owe too to my buddies and to the boys are lying in France, waiting, for and to the boys that great macrifice. God went down with a smile and a “Give ‘em hell, buddie, I'm and threw us the colors to the victory, which we did. urned to our native land, our home that we bad pictured and planned while lying in mud, blood and muck, beneath a shell-shot at- mosphere, and fought and fought| like “hell” ty protect our homes and | our nation’s pride, only to return Next time we will let the stack-|when it was over to find Japs and cre do it and stay, home and get/other foreigners, and slackers hold-| Yours of the ing our old jobs, and jobs we could A. E. handle now while we are loafing, | " |begging and dependent on charity; Some G. O. P. statesman who | for our meat and bread; but we don't | wants to attract a lot of attention | want charity, We want work, where | and get some free ad could FAltor The T Bay we can give our ability for every| pull it by announcing is not a The Star about the returned do This nation is our country.|candidate for nomination for presi. diers being out of work and Mr |r. 100 per cent Americans are not | dent. ried women working in Bremerton bese = and Seattle, It is teh times worse here in Kent. The pickle factory, | | milk co and rubber factory all employ ¥ of thene | women own $4,000 and $5,000 homes, Jalso autés. And their even in the same places, returned soldiers are searching } and finding none 18 months, T at week, and did did not. But the women and two of, @ent to! that the have yard are men out and wife thinking they up funds for wages are much nk nothing of the | Who ng about the | nd keeping 4 knows they The husband in the r well rshipers t pening. the mig ntock | ch They think not ¢ them to re yoo! of minchief ipyard ts not the place for }a won } Many stores in Bremerton ploying Japs where they should hire white men. \ Soldiers did not make money dur-| ng the war, We made a gaod job Jot it, got @mall pay, and when we | return are treated lke dogs | are em SAME AT KENT Star husbands are working while the for | employment | 1 was overseas for looked for a job 1 get one? I name day seven aliens, that I know work at kle fact while } me around again. nomething then SOLDIER Dollar Diplomacy The wisest Diplomat in the world. - ts the man or woman who saves to-day against the needs of to-morrow. One Dollar will enable you to join thousands of Seattle's most thnfty citi- zens m making tdle Dollars show a profit and strict State supervision means all che security that the Law of the Land you = y told me ¢ ai y might have A RETURNED Wash. WHO MAKES THE NOISE Editor Tt You should have investigated the situation at Bremer: | |ton before you censured women | workers at the navy yard It is the rters who are making all the about the aituation. Any ex ce man is eligible to take exam for foremar any other But he must pass. You call attention to the slackers holding good jobs in the y A, veterans starve. I have never known jan ex-service man to be turned down when applying for employment. He lis always given first chance. re are hundreds of ex-service the yard, who do not do ¢ a week to entitle them day's pay | Ex-service men employed are work ling under the understanding that | they will not be fired aa long as there is work The ones who are yelling are the men who were drafted, The man who enlisted doesn't squeal the way the draft men do, You will find that Inine times out of ten, the loud | mouthed beliowers were never at the | | front A Johnny in the rear is yelling, while the man who really got in the hard licks keeps quiet and works As for the women working in the| yard, I never have believed in that. | ‘There should be prohibiting them | from doing so » are women | working in the y |, Whose husbands | are drawing big wages, and are able | to support them, I never have asked | my wife to get out and work I am over 60 years of age and too old to filght, A BELIEVER IN BOTH SIDES OF THE QUESTION, is Star < ve Start Saving To-day RESOURCES NOW OVER FOUR MILLION DOLLARS (ETE Be LA ao SSS Se SS ination or job in the yard PUGET SOUND SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION Where Pike Street Crosses Third men gh work in to one HOUKY. YAM wWSPM alwaye | Many’s the Time you have probably thought with Parlette, “How easy it is to put ye \money into things; how hard it is to get money out of things; and how few honest enterprises were paid out as they promised.” Your copy of his latest book The Salvation of a Sucker will be mailed immediately upon your request with the compliments of TWO KINDS OF RADICALS Editor The Star: I wish to give! my sentiments in regard to a few of the vital questions that are in motion | at the pregent, principally to the raw deal the discharged enlisted men are; being handed by the average busi ness men. First, I wish to state that, in my opinion, in Amer two classes of radi one worship ing the almighty Devil, be as “Red” and “1, W. W covernwent BOON DS wuncirac SECOND AVE. COR.COLUMBIA, SEATTLE