The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 30, 1920, Page 6

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' PAGE 6 The Seattle Star By mat), out of city, b0c per month; 3 months. 7 € montha, $276; Fr $e00,7 in Che of Washington, taide the tate, The per month, $4.50 for € montha, or $9.0 per year. Hy carrier, city, llc per week AUTO MEN SHOULD TAKE LEAD Automobile dealers, agents, and associations should be the first to jump into the fight for the creation of a traffic division in Seattle. | Tt is to their selfish interests to make the streets of Seattle as safe as ssible. ee “gen they surely know that Seattle’s streets are not sufficiently | rotected now. 5 : a ne ¥ Seattle lacks system in the handling of traffic. It has failed to vest the necessary authority in the hands of traffic experts to work [THAT AGAIN? out sound and safe standards. It has failed to enforce an otherwise sufficient traffic code. In short, it needs a traffic division in the police department that shall not be interfered with or meddled with. In other cities such divisions are regarded as next in importance to the detective division. In New York, it is counted as even superior, in importance to the detective division. Yet there are some auto dealers who appear to be against the movement for the creation of a distinct traffic division. It is strange, but that is true. They are standing in their own light and do not know it. They do not sense that if conditions aré safer in the city, their business must, in proportion, be more prosperous. Yet it has always been thus. The paths of progress have often been blocked by the very ones who would reap direct advantages from the proposed changes. The workmen's compensation law, to- day regarded as of equal, if not greater importance to employers than to employes, was fought bitterly by many employers. not know. And they were afraid of the change. ee The Star believes, however, that the auto men of this city are, in general, a progressive lot, and willtsee their way clear. The Star be- lieves that after a full and free discussion of the merits of the case, ‘they will throw the weight of their influence with this movement— and will help give Seattle a real, up-to-date and up-to-the-minute - traffic division. ' [ oF Take No Chances _ The recurrence of the “flu” in Seattle is to be expected. Every great epidemic is followed by a year or two of si ree Liners smaller and milder epidemics of the same disease. : ’ sends it from Ellens The “flu” this year will not be of such virulent character 7 “as the plague that swept over the United States last year. w Doctors are unanimous upon this point. Hundreds of cases of the disease have been reported in) leattlo bride showed! = * ae | 4 whe t should be! anc c p tac m1 food r es out of 50 y 26 1 ed m other Eastern| oe dangerous. Whether it should be/ance should bep laced on good food. | selfishness, and also one ou | we employ 26. If we had all married | the last week from New York, Chicago and | ‘The fottowing song poem, entitied|UMdertaken during pregnancy de |fresh air, and a proper amount of| who get these wages. ‘The majority | women we could get along with 20, | = is saying nothing abost the cities. The mortality has been surprisingly low. “Rumpa," In sung to’ the’ tong er| Benda entirely on the character of rest. He sure to consult your family| ot men in yards and other plants/ay we can depend on anarried | QUIT sites: wo 0 ile | the hernia But tho there is little cause for excitement, wise Precau-| "smiles." and Is submitted by Roy) nc Th + of Three Lakes. “A little ditty EVERETT TRUE They did - rae THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1920. Revolutionists On the Issue of Americanism There Be Mo Compromise 4 ‘ BY DK. FRANK CRANE oe YoU GOT THAT (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) sation FOR me ft pure whale Why all this ery of Revolution? One would suppose, from the manifesto@ of the Communists, Left Wings and Reds, that they are springing something new. When they sign themselves “Yours for the Revolution” they give themselves the air of uttering a strange and startling senti- ment. “Old Stuff.” BY SEORGE DO YOU KNOW I FORGOT They are as the boy of 15 who announces IT'S NOT NECESSARY FOR YOU. TO TOLL MS WHAT YoULL DO— CISTEN — I'LL TELL You as a world-wondrous discovery, that two and two are four. Do they know that the American people were Revolutionists long before Sister Gold- man and Brother Berger were born? Thies country began with a Revolution. George Washington led a Revolutionary army. . Benjamin Franklin, the same who made the remark about the signers of the Dec- laration of Independence all hanging to- gether if they did not want to hang sep- arately, was a Revolutionist. That Declaration was a Revolutionary document. And we have gone on Revoluting during 1 KNOW ALREADY — our entire history. —_ YOU'RE GOMNA oO | Democracy is nothing less than a con- TAK® A NAP (f !tinuous Revolution. || Pregnancy | A. The operation ts not expecially | Chief reliance on building up roxist-|wife $4, That is one of her cases of | work about balf time and that is Why | returned soldiers from uestion can only be de de Sen D | few pleasures in life which only God | wien ’ ANSWERED Teeth ec Coen) ee Rae eueniven: cane pake. Tee Sera oho Bide *% een | TOE YOu recemmend lis now over and try and let that} pj pa gles: A The results following the une | se nem conn and make every Q Inan operatian for hernia of tuberculin have varied consider: | happy instead of trying to make gerous” Would it be advis ° bly. Experience has shown that if] disconte one time jundergo such an operation during | ix by no means assured that injection| She spoke about a case where &) erritient, st of tuberculin will act as @ preventive. | man is drawing $12 a day and his/ time to get tions should not be disregarded. Don’t tempt the “flu” bug | tor your cotumn dedicated to pedes [Sat trig Sarees eer familiar | i i 4 if he’s | trans,” says Roy to closer acquaintanceship—he won’t come around criann® eae Deer < not invited. | What makes my bones ache so. Take City Health Commissioner H. M. Read's advice. Last Seen < came bene an auty Shun the “flu” bug. Avoid crowded gatherings. Don't! onoans sneeze or cough, and don’t stay with anyone who does. f | There are bumps that knock us ailly you get a chill, go home—and stay home until you are sure | P¥™ps that leave us black and blue by There are bumps that make us for| finding out w with all the ciroumstances. u have been reading the should realize that tn a request to make. If your ngine Were not working i surely insist on t was wroi you haven't got the influenza. Isolate all cases. Take no get our troubles, human bedy is @ much more compll | High prices and income taxes, too. | cated machine, and in order to keep chances. |There are bumps in home-made |!t | moonshine; te There are bumps we never feel; The South Carolina senate passed a bill prohibiting | yit'tne hardest bump in old Seattle | ccurate dingnonis in of the greatent your chair smoking in hotel dining rooms and other public places.’ | {5 the bump by an automobile importance. Be sure, therefore, to| And admire your new necktie’ and South Carolina evidently expects a deluge of campaign ces |consult a qualified physician, have rumple your hair, cigars | ‘Two poems in af single day.|him give fou a thoro medical exam! And tell you a story or two "a ring is here! And who gives a| ation, and find out what Is needed.|Of Johnny and Jennie, and Harry ou enough to write poetry? |taking of “blood medicines, | knowing whether they are the proper ; si r Maybe John’s Buried Alive ANSWERED thing to take jo — = /| Our front door ts old‘and 1 most Q. What can be done for bronchial Rhode Island having brought a case, the United States| 777m |" \* rather shabby looking. /asthma? I have no rest from cough in condition it i» necessary to look over most carefully, When tho |The neighbors are always knocking|ing and shortness of breath, yet my supreme court is now going to pass upon the validity of|it. 1* there any way I can stop are F? | that?—Mre. H. M. § the prohibition amendment and the act for its enforcement.) see nian ou nave an elec Millions of dollars’ worth of property has been destroyed, | tric bet put on it? | . | ast thousands of business places have become tenantless, tens) |, O taas wanes ocleee of thousands of workmen have been compelled to seek new cash for th =D. =. B | preegnl we | there is ¢ give m very satis-| to this qu ! jobs, in orderly compliance with enacted legislation, and) |, *' now it will take a lawsuit to determine whether that legis- is » tion, It the musicians pre) your treatmen frankly to you lation is worth a continental. c re doctor assures mo that my heart is strong. What makes me short-wind ed, even if I work a little laster? nee. If y sician, and pe have him refer you to sor Verily, it seems somewhat ruinous to enforce or comply) what ts commonly known as the| *Pecialist with laws before the United States supreme court has|>erth of the new world?—H. T. | A lower in a Pi an car Q. T have had the flu, and am un taken a vote on them. A nice kettle of fish! But, we) jeasy about my lungs. Have not lost guess that John Barleycorn will not be resuscitated, just) What a ofa roll form a baker always make out of dough?—W the same. R — His pay roll. ‘ . | Altho Representative Rodenberg, republican, of Illi- | wow would a toot race can saty| nois, declared the failure of Attorney General Palmer to |rond track most probably end?—J.| appear in support of the Graham sedition bill at the N. K | | | | house rules committee hearing was “a plain case of | In a tle. | | | , j ns cold feet,” he may be mistaken. A grain of common UESTIONS WE CANNOT gense may have percolated the attorney general's under- 9 ANSWER standing. | A stiff collar hurts my neck, but I want to wear something there. ~ r ; as . Where can I buy a smooth ruft7— ‘Is America our friend?” asks the editor of John Bull. | Mavie G | And then he goes on to say America ought to be ashamed |_| Can & person tell time during the | H ing i , ¢ -, day by a night-watch?—H. B. H. | of itself for not going into the war from the start. Looks | In making milk toast, how should | like too much “Bull” on both sides of the Atlantic. |the milk be toasted?. jenevieve. | ‘i ee ace | Do the police and detectives ever | send thelr handcuffs to the laundry? | | Secretary of War Baker may object to promoting Gen. F.C. T Wood to the grade of lieutenant general, but we will | Which does a turnpike gen wager his objections will be more strenuous to seeing \"rlly tum—a. CG | , him promoted to the rank of president. But, as the carpenter remarked, | |\“Tho I may not be able to drive bs ape them, I have a fine pair of horses.” | We feel reasonably safe in predicting that the Bryan | © 608 vote will not be swung to Edwards, of New Jersey, in Singers in the Chicago Grand the ’Frisco convention, It’s real nice to be sure about pew sled 15,4 bik ae compelled to pay 0 men at least one thing in present-day politics. in the audie weight and have no cough, except Tl when I take cold. I have had a slight pain at tmes in my right lung | Someone has advieed me to be im DR. J. BR. BINVON Free Examination The Q. Please give mo a prescription | t of & good blood medicine. | Gaede > t ayntem appears to be out of order, an| “Suppose that I sit on the arm ott for the man who ten't human| Much harm has been done by tho| : * without| And Mary and William and Selma|the son of James II. Ho was born and Nate, - lat Rome in 1720. In the uprising| true American duty to fight for the' A RETURNED Ha! This explains why re is ap Jause at grand opera "Tis stated that the wool ina $50 suit of clothes costs, | sO |BEST $2.50 GLASSES | today, $5.25. And, judging from the way a $50 suit of AN UNFAIR ADVANTAGE | ‘ clothes wears, $5.25 is @ mighty high price for the We: extend” our thanks to the on Earth brad of wil in tt friends who were so kind to the fam-| we are «mo of the few optical |fly in our bereavement. Altho our| stores in th: orthwest that really ————- father had been in the church §0| tind lenses and we are the only | years or more and to think with all _ London reports the Hoover boom for president is be- | tho learning the Rev ing very favorably received there. It's a@ blooming | shame, Herb, those Londoners can’t-vote here. Smith haa, | hat is brought he about affairs tl Young robber made a haul of $30 imuaSeattle dairy. | cine’ over * Family, -—~ Cap Must have been inexperienced, He left.althe.eggs, | Missourian, divardeau.. Mo | and not talk The Brown hope he will learn to talk better | tam the next member of the church | unloss absolutely necessary art to Anish, ne in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE, Examination free, graduat : rist. Glasnes’ not. prescribed a not be ais| BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVENUR Betwee fz and Seneca Phone Main 1550 | We are working away every day at the business of establishing justice for the pressed and curbing the hand f Only we have the Anglo-S instinct that accomplishes Revolution with Order and with Humanity, and not with Destruc- tion and Cruelty. Our method of Revolution is by Ma- jorities. We believe in playing the game, and get- questions of the| 4 her name “An | c newer some of it of food. nan who si jAmerican Cit First, it jher part begru arried ire | ke selfishness on ng other people a on the period of preg: | physician and have him advise you./ draw smaller wages and it is the!) women, high salaried men that keep the cost) >), girls go ph 1 Johnson, the English poet.! in tn rem | INFORMATION EDITOR, Ini Washington, D.C. ooo —— on the %lst of January.! . was executed. He had conv jon all A Leap Year Girl ured in the vault below | no work done the House of Lords, where he was 80 we had to preparing to blow up the howses of But, in the language of the stage, it is | MARRIED WOMEN OKEH J of living up by telling the merchants, | Stars and Stripes of ‘this country as Kaitor The Star; I wikh to| who think they all receive.the same | it has been in past ware, ee, and, therefore, up goes the around, get all tired out, and when| Ana stilt further, the next morning comes for work | ter with some of these they are not there. They that they are sick, but at | Schwager & Nettleton, pereenal anturn, or =. |noon they very likely show up, and! of whore laborers are ribe for individual diseases. |()N the 3ist of January, in 1674.) the first thing you hear from them algo some of the he hop was a stunrer last | who have and that fellow with the white | bon oe some kid, and on goes the the returned soldier, as OMy piece work, as the girls were getting | out joyriding. | ting the greatest good for the greatest nur a | ber; and when any rampant Min diy. gruntied, envious and impatient, athens , by frightfulness to attain ends they anne, himee' reach by persuasion, we know how to de gf with them. Re ie fest. Our sy The failures of our Democracy are may, Hebrew em of Party Governtig, cago 8 keeps them ever before our eyes, tw the means to correct our errors and ty - < dress grievances are equally apparent, ool a The door is open to,any reform, if it om answer | get votes enough. oe Speech is free, when it is not used ee cite to violence. fo eect The ways are unobstructed. You it is get Socialism, Sovietism or anything te neg |—if you can get votes enough, et But the resort to bullets instead of ba any © lots will not be tolerated. monini The rule of a Minority by arms will be resisted, even if Propane the Millennium, * | The essence of Democracy is | the kind of Government wit per We are old and seasoned y a tevolution in this United States; we wey it while Russians still were | Germans still were hoching the We shall go on in our Revolut the power of Wealth here, and the , of Class organization there, political autocrat, defeating the | of every oligarchy, establishing justice every man as near as may and shall do all “sis without bombs and torche, | howling mobs and economic Mad Mullah: Do these wild-eyed Communists thin | they can teach us the art of Revolution It is to laugh! 4 in the clty a certain jag and cannot quality a @ 4 I was in the Soldiers’ club a few nights ago and men from Montana who girls here 8° 4 to find no work there af women are| or the mayor's plans Mat ng all the | Seattie. Don't they Kaew the girls | got work the eity would be fal some restriction on out nights, run) soldiers taking all ti will tele-|employing Japa # from them. They the afternoon and) they wanted out of Bil Bets the war was on he was a fine fel] put everybody on | who was taken home for dinner BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE Parliament with gunpowder. {the credit for work the married) To the “American and Kate, from his father, the first prete Citizen” On the Sist of January, in 178%.) women were doing, while the girls! put the piece dn.your paper, “harles Stuart, pretender to the were talking about some fellow or| think this over if you wast |throne of England, died at Rome.| about the swell time tonight. | the cost of living. You have gt: | Charles Edward, grandson of James! Tam a returned soldier, serving 22| have effictent help ta pr If of England, was known as the| months in France, thru hell and/ goods. Married women are theless) young pretender. to distinguish him / fire, and I am man enough to stand | bone of your industries and snder,|on my own means, not asking the! Americans for they will give public for favors. a I think it was a/ day's work for a Well, what are you going to do?|°f 1746 the young pretender landed at Scotland with a handful of fol- “Buppose that I try to remember|!owers and marched south toward some tune |London, gathering forces as he Of the revels of roses in rapturous| Went. He arrived within 100 miles June, of London, but was forced to retreat Rut you cannot give me a clue,| He and his army were utterly rout And then I remember its name is |¢4 at the battle of Culloden. Charles ‘The Kiss’ | Edward escaped, five months And I start in to whistle it, some thing like this,— Ww hat are you going to do? mch vessel ched Europe and ended his days inglor ly in dissipation and {naction ie high and that rente| With him the et line of the © a fright, | Stuarts became extinct. And twice one is commonly two. on the Sist of January But I don’t belleve that my love| the resolution on the amendment te t I tell you I realize! need grow cold the Constitution abolishing slavery Just because I should keep the good | Was adopted by congress. Its ratifi job that I hold, cation by 27 states was announced Well, what are you going to do?” | December 18, 1865 ' : , a7.) 2 (Copyright, 1920, N. BE. A) On the Sist of January, tn 1917 E + Nee the United States government re | 2 “| ceived a note from the German gov ernment announcing that on Febru ary 1 1917, “sea traffic will stopped with every available wea pon and without further notice” in barred zones around Great Britain ) France, Italy, and the Mediterran Jean. ‘This action of the German | government was the direct and im mediate cause of the severance of diplomatic relations that occurred a few days later, Registered Dentists Our of the high rent distriet, per. sonal service and moderate advertis- Ing enable me to make you this offer: Ge to any dentiat, get bis prices, on come to me and get 20 per cent cut re, with careful, painless methods and pervonal attention. Dr. J. 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