The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 25, 1920, Page 6

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Dhe Seattle Star: nth; 3 months, see yaar, BO in, the 78, Ny Bataiae th a moncha, or $9 a ‘eek. 0 for carrier, city, Ie per w “Over the Top” We all served during the war. True enough. ht Liberty bonds, aided the Red Cross, Salvation Army. : - Some et us started immediately after the war began in) \pril, 1917. — ‘ in | Oth waited a while, | that ardent enthusiast, Jack Sullivan, first vice ident of the American Legion, waited a year before he ned the uniform. And Maj. Hugh M. Caldwell, candi for mayor, waited more than a year before he left the hall to join the judge advocate general's department. © hats are off to all who helped win the war, to the} ty bond buyers, to Sergeant Jack Sullivan, to Maj. rh Caldwell and the many others who, like themselves, over to France. is. honor them, how much more must we honor brave men who not only got over to France, but ht for the chance to get over, refusing swivel chair in order to get into combat service? F : nong these is Philip Tindall, now candidate for the council. He was in uniform from the first day the} began. He could have had an officer's commission had been willing to stay on this side of the fighting. he preferred to decline it in order to get into the real Some of us worked with, h i > Tindall “went over the top.” He fought and he! d. He was wounded and his life was despaired “i fe truly gave. ; And Cove we have the opportunity to show him that have not forgotten. Seattle knew Philip Tindall before he went to war—knew him as a clean-cut, able young H has the qualifications for the councilmanic job—had before he went to war—and more than ever has now. The Unseen World — ’t you remember how mother used to take some to water and mix it with folur and a little sugar} the yeast foam for the next day’s baking. If you Vt remember that you remember how you used to wonder it made the salt-rising bread rise. il, mother didn’t know it, but when she made up the} foam she was preparing a trap to catch millions of yeast plants that seem to inhabit the air everywhere. lence now knows she was trapping wild yeast plants, just trapped wild rabbits. The potato solution she pre-| was pleasing to the little yeast plants, and they} by the millions and multiplied so rapidly that) “made the bread rise and their rapid growth formed science is now engaged in breeding these yeast plants the domesticated ones are so much better than d ones that mother caught. also found that the little yeast plant contains vita- another numerous but little understood inhabitant of discovered that yeast cakes, eaten by baby, will nove the ples from his face. They will take the) ie crwt and vegetables. They will also take the| c yo found recently in a Philadelphia experiment F y yeast plants would add weight to full-grown | y, when a full diet of milk and beefsteak failed to do it. i of undernourished children thruout the world are ng fed on yeast plants and growing fat and laughing. while man is feeding on these :tiny plants, science along and says these plants are also feeding on otHer too small for any microscope to see. stop to think just what a little speck of the great | we touch, or see, or feel, or hear? ent Carranza, of Mexico, says he will retire to | life at the expiration of his term of office on 1,1920. Will the retirement be voluntary, or does the writing on the wall? Overwhelming the municipal elections held last week in eastern, west- southern [reland, 75 per cent of the Sinn Fein can-} were elected. An unusually large number of women pated in the elections. The remainder of the candi- elected were split up among various minorities. 75 per cent election in the United States would be ac-| as fairly conclusive of public sentiment. There ought be no doubt about how Ireland feels politically. Every| tion shows the Sinn Fein stronger. This is a fact which je British government and all other governments ought) ognize. The moral is that attempts at repression by| of political and economic movements defeat their _ _ It is reported from Indiana that jazz music makes _ hens lay more eggs. They probably think it the lay of the last minstrel. The Good to Come _If any good is to come from national woman suffrage it) will be largely due to the widening and deepening of the| it of the people in the laws passed and in the men! administer them. | is true that women take a great interest in problems 3 directly affect women and children, more than male voters, as a rule, but this is not sufficient. The leaven of the sense of responsibility for public welfare must work thruout the whole body of the public and must extend to all laws and all public officials Woman suffrage does more than double the vote. It helps| spread the sense of responsibility which is so badly) if our country is ever to rise above the level of| litics, and to make our government more truly of, and for the whole people. Flour has dropped another dollar a barrel, but bakers apparently don’t buy theirs by the barrel. Times Have Changed When the government took over the railroads in 1918, ogee Cummins bitterly denounced the proposal to pay | railroads a standard rental of $936,000,000 a year as/| extrav. it. He proposed that their compensation should be nearly $100,000,000 less than the amount recommended | by_the president. Today Senator Cummins stands sponsor for legislation| which will guarantee the roads earnings of $1,072,000,000.| This is $126,000,000 more than the standard return paid | the railroads during government control. i \ bachelor | clors. WE'LL SAY SO Greetings! There's a lroppihg off Queen Anne hill abrupt y into the and still they won Why some men preier to remain Tho man at the next dew high cliff sighed (Are you following, The man at the ried, More, t reared a» Henry?) next desk is mar tw a father, He ha \ thru that perilous period and = burned slivers and first teeth n has become a mi nan has developed Unguistic talents and can Daddy ere, Henry? The man at the next desk lives on top of the cliff that drops abruptly into the bay, And owns a Ford. (Remember the Ford, Henry; tt playa an importAnt part in this har rowing entitled, “Why Some Men Remain Bachelors of cron nd Coll finger And the who y aay There comes a t of every man’s life, when it becomes his am crows the road and see what | yond. The son of the man next desk was fired with ion Mon day (lenry, di in the course young at such am jo not leave me now.) The man at the nextt desk was ac tually at work (it ls the truth) The telephone rang. erled the man at the 3 you my?’ For Can't find him anywhere on the hill? Did you notify the police? A posse? “Yen, next denk two hours yor! Organise (And thin in where the Ford comes in, Honr buy a Ford. Did the man at the next desk hen! tate or Mnger? He did not. “Th precip: he cried, and leaped int: Ford, He Hut not far The Ford moaned, coughed, and, with that shook its every fiber If you ever get married. hin was gone. a nob stopped (What. alting?) The man at the next desk broke oa run The ‘precip: he bab Li 1, and, stil! babt moked over No crushed and t form tay huddled on the 1 rocks below He turned, ere, before him smeared with stick, pleasant mud. stood a linguistic young man, who shouted Daddy (We dare say, Henry, some will be bachelors always) ° . W. W. prisoners may better food or they bh the trial. e-. ho, Henry! Are you still ng nd tt Montesano I they must ha won't go on w . Why all these headlines about Iron county? There's a raisin. Three ladies got on the BE. Madison car, Three gengemen got up and of fered seats. Two ladies mat; also a longshoreman. Did the three gentle men burn him with words that could be heard the length of the car? Oh most certainly they said nothing whatever! Oh, yea; oh, yeu! But did he keep the seat? You know it The ol4-fashioned man who used to paint the town red now white washes it. . Former King Charlie of Austria certainly has suffered. Hin friends aay his income has been reduced to $750,000 & year. He ought to pick up and live with his wife's folks, eee After all. mebby the landlord jan't so bad. All of us knock him and he boosts us. A western physician says married men do not eat so much as bach. “There's a reason.” “MOERINE” FOR FALLING AR For a few cents you can save) your hair and double its beauty ( / \ To stop falling hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dan fruff, get a wmall bottle of delightful at any drug or toilet for few cents, pour little in your hand and rub it int the hair usually stops coming out and u can't: find iruft. Hel your hair grow thick and long and become oft gio twice as beautiful and abundant. Danderine” counter any da atror and You Get a LloT for your money when you buy - BOB WHITE TOILET PAPER The National Stand- ard of BIG VALUE. HighQuality-Sanitary- and very Economical ~Sold everywhere Ask for BOB WHITE: AMERICAN PAPER CO, Bob White Distributers Seattle EVERETT TRUE Yes, y've BECn to THe JONES WED- DING. AS USUAL YOU COMe BACK WwhtH A RED NOSES iF YoU a CAN'T GOTO A WEDDING “WITHOUT CRYING WHY DON'T “UNHAPPY” INDeeDs THERE'S ONLY ONE WEDOING THAT EVER ABSENCE . = 4 BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE ve not thought of you all day! oned you from work or play n a which still is near Tho you be far away an@ I am he It glows upon my conscience like a rear Not to have summoned you from where you are Hut to have dumbly let your image stay Faded and distant all the livelong day fonship always come when I am eo Inclined travel thru the temple of my mind peer behind its pillars for a while dart upon me with a sudden smile You lean close to my ride, or roam about And send me back « happy, atlent shout Where have you been today, when I forgot To call you to the councils of my thought? You You You You And, oh}—tt comes upon me like « pall— Suppose forever I forgot to call, And all the world forgot! What then? Do any of un live outside the ken Of thone who know and love us? PT nore call, Can we be certain that we are at all? Then let me not neglect a single day Lest in some interval, you «lip away! (Copyright, 1920, N. B. A) What then? Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. &. Public Mealth Bervice WHAT TO EAT AFTER FLU Proper diet is of the utmost tm-) portance to one recovering from an|day, but principally between meals attack of pneumonia or influenza,|and before going to bed and the following foods are suggest |ed as being most wholesome for the! | convalescent FOR BREAKFAST — Fruit milk or cocoa with milk, bread and butter Fruits (select | nana with milk, apple sauce, stewed prunes, stewed apricots, stewed peaches, peaches with milk, pears. Cereals (select one}—Oatmeal with milk, farina with milk or butter, or | farina pancakes (for a change), rice | and milk or rice pancakes (for a| otther ‘i change), bariey and milk, cornmeal! questions Jand milk, ¢ream of wheat and milk | only to hymtene, ogg ie |honey and milk 8. Wil be FOR DINNER—Sot meat, cooked or raw v bread. Soups (select one)—Split pea, vere table, barley in milk or meat soup, Jrice in milk or meat soup, farina] var = p| i in milk oF meat soup, egg érop in| At the time of its birth the giraffe measures six feet from its hoofs to meat soup, potato in meat | wiih acai | the top of Its head | noodle in meat soup, celery in meat| | soup | Meat or fish (select one). j beef, beef veal loaf, fbotled or chuck (broiled), chopped steak, scra beef, weakfish, butter-fish, flounder, ! cod, biuefish,. pike, whitefish dock uch other fresh f! available. | FOr SUPPER Fem | ed fruit and pudding and Jof milk or cocoa | may be jon is Answered Q cor-| for a four-year-old boy who t# rup ana | tured? Can it be cured without op eration? A. In young children a slight hernia ean often be cured entirely by the wearing of a suitable truss When this fails, or when the hernia is already of large mize, a surgical operation will probably be required ealn, one}—Orange, ba “UNCLE SAM, M.D." will ancwer, ai wer ques. personal nature, of jor individual dis: ases, fish or] ables and | presario irene INFORMATION EDITOR, U, & Public Health Serviee, Washington, D.C, soup Boiled lamb steak atew atewed), »ped | or has a stew & glans and milk 1 taken in form it dig otherwise. they | should soft boiled or | poached, or in the form of a custard. (Custard ia made by beating up an| exe in a cupful of milk, adding a | te nful of sugar with or without 4 few drops of vanilla extract, plac Jing it in a pan of water and allow ing it to bake for from 15 to 20 minutes.) Pot cheese and are nourishing. Apple, rice, taploc noodle pudding m: the evening meal | One should not forget the glasa of milk or Those who be eaten To begin the new year right request all of our former patrons to call and have their teeth and gums examined, and if anything 1s wrong, we will gindly make over and treat the gums free of charge. we earnestly American cheese All work guaranteca'16 years. nago, bread or be selected for United Painless Dentists INC, ¢ recovering from in | fuen: monia should remain away from work as long as possible Jand should avoid overworking and i fatigue as much 8 possible when / they return to their duties. |i necessary for those who do not | 908 Third Ave. Cor, James St. do manual labor best exercise Phone Eliiott 3633 is walking in th | One should get from seven to Hours; 8:30 a eight hours sleep every night in a Sundays, 9 to 12 well-ventilated bedroom, or pne' Bxereise Drink plenty of water during the What i* the proper thing to do! m, to ¢ p.m, | On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise An Editorial for Boys BY Di. FRANK CKANE (Copyright, 1914, by Frank Crane) A representative of a High School class | writes me, asking if I will write an editorial especially for boys. Certainly. Here is one. You might call it Fundamentals. Which means things that come before all other things in importance, or things that ought to be believed in First of all. You can find all these Fundamentals your instincts. They are inside of you. And the first is to realize why you were born, why you are here on this earth. Your instinct answers “I am_ here yhave fun And that is true. And the object of all schooling and train- ing and advice and wisdom that you get ought to be to show you how to have the most fun with the least pain. The second Fundamental is that the kind of fun that tastes best and lasts longest comes from just one thing-—Service. Which another for Work. It may seem queer to you to be told that there is more fun in Work than in Play, jyet that is the truth. The main thing in your life is to find |the kind of work you can do best, the kind |your Maker has fitted you to do, the kind | }you naturally take to. Then give yourself |to that, train yourself to do it well, learn to love it, and out of it you will get more }genuine satisfaction than from all the Play | in the world. | To get the most fun out of Work you jmust learn Team-play, or how to adjust yourself to others. Somebody said that “this world is inhabited mostly by other | people:” to is name think of the | BY THE REV. CHARLES STELZLE Sin ts contagious agion atter: curse Its worse than the fisease. tt is parstble to guard jagainet physical a. |very hard to sbield y lly from: sin. wi! ily prin und but it's recif entire- cane, You can quarantine smallpox, but | you can't quarantine is more harmful than »ma You may shut out sickr it's almost impoentble to seeregs who seek destroy th io es of men and,women thr pernicious personal influences. | But—let’s come a little closer | What about parents who are spreading the disease of sin? Have you ever noticed how your little children have “caught” your pet sin? You know how they tmitate you. | You Ifive passed on to them many—if not most—of the bad habits of which you are guilty, and you have made life more of a struggle for them because of this handicap, « It will be harder for them to | think truly and to act squarely. | | Besides this, they will be pen- alized because, of the sins which | j they have Inherited from you—why jaded to the burden by compelling |them to carry the weight of your | bad habits in addition? The facts that sin is contagious | jis one argument for tsolat! yg those | |whovare guilty of sins ‘atch are! harmful to the community. | It isn't as easy to be specific in {designating types and kinds of sir jas It is to designate contagious dis but we're coming more an © to find out which practice: and habits of men can no longer br regarded as “solitary” evils but “social” evils, And this refers to a much wider! rangé of sins or crimes than are commonly un sin—and Oo” SUSOUSNSUiSisre beginning to tiful effects of the! in biighted and blind- | fed lives for others because of the yourself | supreme selfishness of one, 100 cents when placed Savings of thousands of Seattle’s most thrifty and successful citizens, Not only are you assured absolute Safety by strict State Supervision but your Savings alg Resources Now Over Four Million Dollars PUGET SOUND SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION Where Pike’Street Crosses Third Learn to work with, not against, others, The value of our work, and the joy we get out of it, depends upon whether we work for the Common Good or for Ourself. There is a good deal of difference of opinion as to how to serve God best, but there ft difference of opinion among honest people as to the fact that to help along the Common Good, is the best kind of service th Goa, Don’t make your chief aim to Get On, to become rich, or to be famous. Leave those matters to Fate. They are the gifts of Destiny and it is foolish to struggle for them. It makes ning people out of ten very wretched. Because, naturally, they cannot all be foremost, any more than all the trees in the forest can be the highest. But make your chosen end in life to be to do your Work well and thus to take yourself off other people’s backs, and to serve Humanity. And serving Humanity does not neces- sarily mean being a missionary or a charity worker; it means doing good Work any- where, as a carpenter, plumber, engineer, merchant, writer, cook, or miner; for if everybody did this kind of Work well, there would be no need for much of what we call Charity Work. Make your aim in life Achievement, and Happiness will come and live with you. But make that aim Happiness and you will miss it, Real Happiness is a by-product of Achievement. And remember that the most important rfeans to the end you seek is Training (education). There is less and less room on the earth every day for the Untrained. a 1s (fun) is contagioustt is soctal ¢ Some THE day we'll learn ) unto himself.” Then we'll be more ready to con- sider others before we bring upon them untold suffering because of | our personal sins. that “no get a but wel In to its thickness, sgon carry this | frog skin makes the toughest leath- over to all forma of life. | er. Here, Your Dollar is Worth One Hundred Cents HATEVER may be the power of your lar in the market it ts still here with the . Save and be Safe! carn a profitable rate of interesy, $1 will start you, ONSPNGNENON@ ONE GieNe ii A Eye Specialist and Medical Author : | Report on Wonderful Remedy : To Strengthen Eyesight Says It Strengthens Eyesight 50% in One Weel Time in Many Instances Dr. a lint Smith, a well) was notice and Dr, Jud- tts physician and | pear | medical . following | the jreports a ch test of a popular reme G e | kis and at the Was prot think what the 1 to it, | was! Hut it ja al extrem every newland the o prove its! cinlized 4 |the lids were I feel quall-|her eyes are intelligent opin-| girl of 16." Dr. Judicin H and | ly the t r ago am frank t 1 ha the I have talke every thoughtful physician to Hon-Opto the same careful trial 1 have, and there is no doubt in my | mind that he wil ¢ to the con-|the « lusion I have, that opens the for th y oye t whic a ult to cope individuala who had worn glasses for years tell me they have dis pensed with them through the use of 1-Opto, Int n practice I have it at th yestght than § n one week I hav 1 it with sur sults in cases of work- | ey os, pink inflamed | glasses \ rhal’ conjunctivitia, smart- | according painful, aching, itehin King, the d from colds 1 wind, watery and, in fact litions tdo numero! mention in this report. A new and|s triking case that has just been ught to my attention is that of a] “I was almost pars old. Tx see to read at all inlists, after a tho: | everything without 1, apoording my eyes do dtr to nave night they her right eye, the left must|Now they fee be removed, While awaiting an op-|was like a miracle portunity for the operation, and still | who used it says h thoroughly « perience strengthen the per cont'in one instance Vieun tim: prising amoke we d At the end of a w the inflammation bh rt savir va was almost raw right as many a mvince with Bon-Opto and many lad t Smith hope and help for nf » laid them After using It blind not hurt would pain. d 1 fine all the “The atmosphere ny with or without sing this p verything 8 even fine k | glasses.” tH Another who used it says: was bothered with eye strain, nd of six weeks |cansed by overworked, tired eyes, ed saved. Just| which induced fierce headaches, I of that eye|have worn glasses for several years, Another | both for distance and close work. 3 years old.)and without them I could not read si vision and| my own name on an envelope or the of the lids,|typewriting on the machine before I can do both now, and have ‘arded my long-distance glasses gether, I can count the flutter= leaves on the trees across the reet now, which for several years etts physi- e looked like a dim green blur to ‘or 1 e I cannot express my joy at »ne for me.” d that thousands who can now discard them le time, and multitudes ewill be able to strengthen their be spared ghe trouble tihe glasses. lescriptions ited in this any drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. | Dissolve one tablet in a fourth of a glass of water, and use from two to four tim day. You should notice y clear up perceptibly right start, and inflammation s will quickly disappe: yes bother you, ev . it is your duty to take » them now, before it is too Many hopelessly blind might wht if they had n time. ninent phys 1 almost di Hon-Opto | di normal, and | al in, e remedy for of many eye n developing I am d from my ex that it will ght at least 50! t¢ * time jn many train know and clalists and widely pres m, I have used it very easfully in my own practice on pa- ents Whose eyes Were strained throug rk or misfit glasses, It is on very few preparations I feet should ton hand for regular use in almost famjly Bon-Opto, re is not a patent meat medy, 1 n ethical prepara~ printed on the urers guarantee we glasse aside, One Could not Now I can read any glasi lasses, | one week's time in many. inet * time in many tnstances, or scription for| refund the money, It is dispensed whder ms clear 1 | guaranty by all good @ this print without | ity « Baader) 9)

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