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The Seattle Star ail, out of city, Kc per moath; § montha, 3.4 BS ace 2.78, 5 Seen Why” carrier, city, carrier, ' do per wee 23 rmceeeremenvcon) | VERMA. shun Wanted: More Hotel Room —By CONDO YES, WE ADVERTISED FOR A STGNOGRAPHER, PUT BEroRe L HIRE ANYOWNES T ALWAYS UKG To STUDY THE TACE AND JUDGES We ICHARACTCR. Ll @AN'Y See YouR pace The Star: A very important and serious situ- has arisen. | recently returned from the East after “ 1 pape ng the tourist agencies. 1 have had several con-||ReCAUSE OF THS ROUGE, PoWwoe;rr. AND Schesines ons with influential railway passenger agents and IF YOU'LL REMOovVS IT ~~- young mernma ———— ut on with prominent automobile club representatives. 1 had with an important railway man today. This gen- stated that in his opinion Seattle was losing $150,- fa day thru lack of hotel accommodation. The people come here don’t stay any longer than they can help scores of travelers are passing thru the city without because they are told of this lack of accommodation. s is not only a loss to the hotels themselves, but far so to the business of the city. il the interviews I have spoken of demonstrate without bt that the tide of the tourist travel has been directed the Pacific Northwest. It has come to stay unless deflected because of the handicap I have referred to. is absolutely out of the question for this city under the circumstances to entertain any idea of being host e convention. hotel proposition is something Seattle must take up.| were a chance of securing this immense cash reve- m any other enterprise, say shipbuildmg, lumbering, e works, canneries, or a like industry, Seattle would to get it and to retain it. Of all the propositions are being considered by the people of this city with p object of advancing its progress and prosperity, this e to say, is the most important. ot Seattle think of some means of starting something will procure for the city accommodation for those- who to visit it and do business here? It has been sug-| that something of a temporary nature, like the Inn of the World’s fair, should be provided. ghty thousand people will visit Portland during the of the Shrine convention. They will spend not less ‘ days and a $10.00 expense account per day is y small thing for a Shriner. That is $3,200,000. } people will spend three weeks in the Pacific } This demonstrates the value of just this one crowd | 1 know that all the railway trains and all the high-| | 8 are going to be crowded daring the whole summer | visitors with money to spend. Today, at this time of| — P year, it is difficult to get a good room in the city of with wear to the 1 tive at REALLY PRETTY, AND THAT WOULD BAR HER NERE — MT WIFG WOULDN'T STANO FOR HGR, ANO LI WOLLDN'T 8G ALS To KG@P MY -MIND ON IMPORTANT made more rf & foot Ht, it reall une ily our family into the tu: 1 bull and w those ma on th Soon we water near fin came int ave ming ing eye be boat and of the fin nd ite wr Handicaps BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE Young Youth started on a day And chased a dust-cloud down the way Youth is swift and Youth is strong But, then 1p again and line, I had vi Juring the past year Olympia raised $300,000 to build a fel that will meet their needs. They have leased it to 4, pal man to pay 6 per cent on their investment, and the T believe, has got a very good thing indeed. HERBERT CUTHBERT, Re capa | Ge “way Executive Secretary Pacific Northwest Tourist sy rad pds qualendba Pay -© 2g | wt netloed Association. P $.—As a last thought, may I express the private opin- ‘ the building of a stadium is not one-half as import-| the procuring of a first class hotel of from 600 to) Tooms ? ‘ | ) | The dust-cloud still efcaped his clutch, Yet still he followed, hot of haste, For Youth has never time to waste But the f grew frantic I eplashed m 4 | companiment But of no ay Old Age took his pack and staff, Paused to look and paused to laugh Wrapped him in his ample robe And started out to belt the globe. Age i& stiff and Age is slow, And sometimes Age is loath to go, But when he falters in his gait, Oh, Age has always time to wait. - Striking waiters in Los Angeles hotels and cafes de- their tips have decreased 50 per cent since prohi- went into effect. Sober customers probably like get their money's worth. baan in for home as Mayor Hug! | Spied dust-clouds down the road—and chasgd! hold out under the present drain.” This’ was the alarm- — declaration made by President Charles Lathrop Pack at (Copyright, 1920, N Common | recent meeting of the American Forestry Association of \—— Fi € | tt inflammation ts surpr alarming and yet this country is paying little or no! on to the situatioi. In 1904, President Roosevelt! the first clarion call for woods conservation. Sixteen has passed but this government as yet has no definite try policy. It is the only civilized country that has| two day We guarantee «a small ee 0 | the people of this country be made to realize the bottie of Lavoptik to help ANY) The English is one of the most ing of the following: Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. 8 Public Health Berowee = Pyonord ones pol a a flexible ot Innguages Frinstance, the ‘ tnt i. . weir Fg sila oy Alumio ye « REE. witnesses in the Newberry trial refer j it forest fires in the United States annually burn over DISE: S AND SEASONS Swift Drug Co, and leading drug-|to the printed matter. they dis- en times the forest area devastated by German armies in} oo. eins to be a connection , almost « atin . [tributed as “literature.” a mee | under «e Aside & i, ey ee pe between season and the pre ‘That the annual new growth of timber is not moge than d of the amount being used or destroyed every year. the Great Lakes states now import lumber and pay in freight rates on wood, the backbone of all in-| | of certain diseanes. Just how much |clifnatic conditions have to do-wit but debatable question. beginning eart Ynie in a lions it is m fact that, i in autumn, whooping cough in t i ; creases as the season advances. } tt New England is no longer self-supporting in a lum- Possibly the cold weather in: |‘ [Brepertio ¥ ‘ : creases the flow of the secretions are American Forestry association offers a forestry policy| trom the nose and mouth, and |nince these are the carrying agents United States and urges action. It proposes : ; ‘ le ° #0 of whoopin cough, | x» Extension of federal timber holdings. ely okt pg Pin | ANSWERED ' Co-operation with the states in fire protection and | poriunity for the spread of the a —™ % Q Would you advise my taking of Gisease, the in m treatment for her Loans on growing meastes, German — measles and | Ot i een eta? chick: . © with us*se con Forest surveys and research. ae eee ere A. There in am yet no specific ‘There may be objections to some of these planks. But, cure for tuber and — the ay, let’s have some kind ofea forestry policy that will SS eS air, good for the future. companiment of childhapd. Many |f00d, rest and freedom from care 1 a mother bas exposed her child|®94 worry. If you will send me Lo lto these diseases, firm in the be.|¥our name and address I will send This Fi Ls W |jiiees that she waa performing n|¥ou some helpful pamphlets on tu ish < \ ance of the | berculo 6 sure © your a onder }rood act and in ignorance of tne |Perculowis. Be wure | fees || danger in whioclf she placed the life clan, oF pr of one whom she loved, Yet i # you « fs safe to way that these common | Y™ phy diseases “not only take a heavy | health officer tolb of the children of our land directly, but that they alao followed by results which may erip. ple thé child or shorten its life | Of ail the deaths registered in the United States during =r years, nearly one-third occu children under 15 years of nearly 20 per cent was among dren wnder one year of A new tide of catfish stories has been surging in from| joke factories of late. Every few years some humorist discovers anew that a h has nineteen lives, and that it will live a couple of | ys without solid nourishment or a bath. eir attention should be called to the Alaskan black fish; Dallie Pectorcilis, to be exact. Here is an unexploited inny treasure trove that should prove worth while. The . fish is considered a delicacy by the Eskimos, who _ ¢atch it thru the ice. - Thousands and thousands of the fish ave caught thru the . | ger and piled in great ricks in the snow. months after, months of hibernating in a solid iey , these fish are thrown in the frying pan and fre- mtly come alive, and flop out on the floor of the native’s , much to the amusement of the family. Indeed, there is the solemn assurance of the federal fish ps that the black fish is seldom dead until he is buried in an Eskimo, and next to the white man’s devil talking thine, with half a dozen jazz records, there is nothing the Arctic circles that provides so much innocent amuse- mt as this animated frying of the never-say-die blackfish, Sometimes a sudden thaw descends on a quietly sleeping itive village, and when the inhabitants arise in the morn- ing, lo, their fish heaps have melted, and half of their food a4 has fl back into the nearest ice hole. e black fish has a calico marking down its back that it appear as tho it has been glued together hastily by some slap-dash mechanic, and its geweral characteristica ‘would indicate that here indeed is a cheerful little fel- low for the harassed and jaded humorist who, wie eee exclaims: “Of making jokes there is no end and most them are s weariness to the flesh.” i UNCLE SAM are vither in this ne sanitation and the f disease, it will be x him (o answer ques tions ef a purely personal nature, or to preseribe for individual djsenses Addrens INFORMATION EDITOR, S. Public Health Washingte nee The CANDY Cathartic ail is WE'LL SAY SO || don't know where Madison park ia, don't wy we poor mar but in winter proceed Not mo much-battered and ‘ alk and Finally we got out as far ap we wanted to (rather fared) and got out our lines, put one slimy iniehs of relief around my shoe buttons and let out kept on shouting Dad followed suit and lent an ac the desen—-all headed fur our lines Dad said he had never seen so many “We hauled In our lines and pulled would take ua.” . witchhazel, camphor, hydrastix, ete. @ with delicately ritten on er in the of one ida who Iiv wa un this read, in your History of the at school, of The Era of Good surreptitiously to our Even when a boy you wondered why citi- mal aforethousht. | zens of so wonderful a coun ae rhis ian't a |(uarreling like cats and dogs all the time, it may wound just, and it was a relief to find out that once, inly tn t my exper ran y all my vled innocence I truth of thin tale Madivon park, If you contention which have find out, In summer tyre are high and dry we have to sleep with op and carry a we £0. One day last ad 1 went fishing in afraid our ‘boat’ was licans and Democrats have of quiet would help some. As a matter of fact, there is show than for vil heart we all want some sort of peaceful | of enthusiasm, should sweep away the petty, re an ve feet lan, ” ” at . 4, | ° be * Se ee nek | Working agreement with other countries, | pot-house squabblers, with all their bunk © y wasn't built for fam- Whether you call it a League of Nations or | of Party, with their narrowness and self- not, and we all want American interests | interest; if we could all get together, Ameri- ee ink anc ced safeguarded. Why, in God's neme, cannot | cans all, drop our differences, shake hands, dad and 1, clumbered we all get together? wore and embarked ap our out by the Great War. Such tired you push the hang about them. as far an we An Era of Good Feeling Do you remember with what pleasure you James Monroe was elected President? at any rate, they all quit and got together. Isn't it about time NOW in this U. S. A. to have a little rest from the discord and been nights and days hideous for so long? Give us a rest from Partisanship. scowling, spitting, and throwing things at | each other for a long while now, and a bit now upon which the people are divided. At Every historic demarcation between the two great political parties has been wiped ery, the tariff, Bimetallism, and others we once split over, are dead; nobody cares a We all want to get to work, to produce, On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise BY Di. FRANK (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) to tend to our farms and shops. Doughboy and gob hurry to get off their uniforms and back to their jobs. We are tired of fighting, and just as tired of fighting each other’ as of fighting the Hun. ‘Tireder. The public cannot permanently be inter- ested in the dispute over one man. We &re perfectly willing to leave it to history and to the next generation to decide whether Woodrow Wilson was a statesman or a blunderer. We don’t want all our business to go to the devil while we are settling that point of pride and resentment. The country is sick and tired of the anties of professional politicians skirmishing around to raise fictitious issues, to arouse blind passions over nothing, upon whose wave they may ride into office. Would it not be wonderful if the masses, | the whole people, by a tremendous outburst United States, Feeling, when try had to be making our Repub- been cursing, no great issue | go to work, find some man whose tie to America ig strong just. because his tie to Party is weak, and thus follow our mag- nificent Co-operation in War by a Co-opera- tion no less magnificent in peace? And is not right now the psychological moment for another ERA OF GOOD FEELING? issues as Slav- and size the situation up and { you don’t think the applica of rubber heeled carwheels would prove the matter some, or, maybe, new set of mainaprings under the roadbed wiegly, squashy © hock and started to saw on ripple on the us Then a beautiful view. We began to cs. and with calculat J at the #ime of our at the relative Phen the wriegly may away from us, Two | Calling attention to the modest dently an automo. who lives at 1321 young man, ey Wie salesman, Seneca st 1 Also calling attention to the Tur lretl Bhoe Co, to whom he writes the darned fin bobbed headed straight for my sions of weeds wrapped | * . ae follown jentiemen: For the past nev leral yearn, I have been what might be called 4 consintent customer and admirer of the very fine shoes whieh you carry “However, in the inet year or two, the price of shone has ad vanced to such an extent that I new find it almost impossible to neparate myself from a sufficient amount of money to buy one pair at one time, and the thought oc- curs to me that I might be able to avail myself of a handsome pair of shoes which you now have in your window with a price tag of some $23 attached, providing you can | handle the transaction in the sume }manner tn which we sell automo biles; that of selling them on a ething in our young | conditional mle contract fine! Go ‘way that dad didn't frown r ish didn't go T while the boat wobbied y rod in the water and with thunderous roars ail. Fine bobbed up by hin Ute fast as tine and tide h M. Caldwell, Dear Sir Dur Forests Old Age bore his heavy load 4 Ry pu take office, you! “I feel that I could, under pres. at NS a pap’. ean noon off and ump 5 ake a t of one-third F : Around the world and reached that road, utes on the street car over on ere > in ote pore -five to 30 years is the limit to which our forests! Where Youth, still panting in his haste, ne Green Lake line to 65th ave.| monthly payments, with interest, y' r secured by conditional sales con. tract, and fully covered by tneur. anoe against fire and theft. “This no doubt sounds a little unusual ut I fully you that TI am quite sincere and | would be very glad to purchase the | pair of shoes in mind, providing you can comply with my terms. “Very truly yours, A. SHOR WEARER, “1321 Seneca a” Witchhazel ne for Sore Eyes wing how quickly eye le helped by common can aasure avoptik eye wash. One who had been troubled eye inflammation for was greatly helped tn Dttake Go-morrow a Red Letter Dav. By starting to Save To-morrow. the 5th of March, you will earn a full Four Months Dividend on July Ist: And by starting the all important habit of Thrifty Saving, you can easily make it a Red Letter Day in your history Safety and High Earning, Power Is Assured for Every Dollar You Leave Here. Any ume ts a good time to start Saving, but this extra five days dividend makes this a particu- larly good time. Resources now over Four Million Dollars PUGET SOUND SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION. Where Pike Street Crosses Third this letter, copy of which ts mailed | #| RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco “Safe 70iLK tw NF ANTS 004 INVALIDS Horlicks va, = ‘a Porlnfenra, Invelidsend Growing Children | Rich milk, melted grain extract in Powder ‘The Original Food-Drink for All Ages| Neo Cooking — Nourishing <= Digestible ofotoposfofopopofoofofo[o[o[o) a The clients of JOHN FE. PRICE & 00. 4 c a hewe reason to affirm that it is WHERE SAFETY DWELLEB. YOUR INCOME TAX STATEMENT IS DUE MARCH FIFTEENTH | Federal income Taxes due and payable on or before of this month, you will realize the timely im- P. Ofoopotoojoyo) Go) afolofofoloyoyolo) nd excellent value of the wing TAX EXEMPT MUNICIPAL nonDs Am lew Due Yield $2 -King County Road Bonds + 1920 to "24 54% Chelan County General Obliga- tion 5%% Road & Bridge Bonds 1928 to °39 34% 2,500—Latah County, Idabo, Highway District No. 4.... . 1930 to ‘39 12.000—Latah County Idaho, Genessee t ak Highway Diniric 1939 op. "29 JOHNEPRICES-( ome BONDS wmcirac SECOND AVE. COR.COLUMBIA, : r Income Tax Department, under the direction of Mr. Willigm Catrns, the expert in income tax law, is prepated to assist you iO} * preparing your income tax return without cost or obligation. pfofotopopoyoofoopofo}oro.o poy aro} e 6“ ” 2] The “Qpen Door = =| is not a foreign policy with this bank. Our usefulness to you is based upon an “open door” which admits you to the benefit of the knowledge and experience of our officers in open, “man-to-man” style. NATIONAL CITY BANK OF SEATTLE Second at Marion WMTTEANRANGUUAUUOUHTOOUGUOLGLEDEAGGAUOA TAAL ‘I Don’t Need to Tell You’ says the Good Judge ~ Why so many men are going to the small chew of this good tobacco. You get real tobacco sat- isfaction out of this small chew. The rich taste ~ lasts and lasts. You don’t need a fresh chew so often. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that, Put Up In Two Soles s W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacca