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The “Miracle Man” said: ‘Go, woman, thy faith hath made “And Jes whole!’ The appearance here Man” who is saic of hands, illus s the ; great panacea that ur _ That a Rie of bodily \ mere power of Faith is a tenet of religions as old as worship of Baal. » The miracles of the early Christians, the cures of the to of Lourdes, the latter-day religions based upon doc- of absolute faith, may be scoffed at by science, but are as ingrained in the heart of man as the belief a future life. i to effect cures by the laying on fundamental belief in Faith as nderlies all religions. | WE'LL SAY SO We le tha Greetings! Another murder give em’ another week to de Fat" did it of James Moore Hickson, the modern |, ills should be accomplished by Now that the professora claim we are able Mara, we » talk to nugget call up and ask if “Fat” te there. Science is often wrong; but the fundamental instincts * laws as im- the human race are based upon intrinsic : Euclidean as the law of gravitation or the n Moore Hickson may, or may not, work such as are claimed for him; the fact is immaterial ex- to those affected; what is important is that a simple, and deeply religious man is demonstrating In an of surface materialism the indubitable fact that Faith one of the great stars by which mankind moves to its tined end. Every nation in the world is convinced that it is the duty of every other nation to settle down and increase production. a considerable part of it—is due to go house- who can get roofs for their heads are paying dearly the privilege, and are due to pay more. American Institute of Architects, in a letter to the nt’s industrial commission, thus summarizes the housing situation in the United States. It has sent y of its letter to all congressmen and other publie and public-spirited citizens. n the people of the this acute problem during the war, and it seemed that unless some remedy was devised, munitions get manufactured, ships wouldn’t get built, and mtly the war might be lost, something WAS done out housing. It was done quickly, efficiently and with-| ; hesitation. | ea Sam, faced with the fact that private initiative or wouldn't, meet the situation, met it himself. , | U. S. Housing Corporation was formed, and it built It built them expensively perhaps—maybe waste- “> i but it put roofs over the heads of workers at mod- ate rentals, and so it helped win the war. The workers! "Bridgeport, New London, Norfolk, Philadelphia, and of other munitions and shipbuilding centers, now| A fivepound sapphire has been found tn India. If it only weighed a} couple of pounds more we know a/ in the comfortable, beautiful, modern dwellings that Sam put up, can testify that the government DID, | armistice came. The government was demobilized. wi the housing corporation. Under pressure, it aban- ned its work, sold material, half-finished houses, equip- st and supplies. Its organization vanished; work) ind now we are more than ever in need of houses; pri-| initiative can't or won’t supply the deficiency; rents "rising, industrial unrest increases. The American In- tite says the situation is getting worse, and will be much Members of the United States Brewers’ association ous they are “out of politics entirely.” But that | ‘tall they are out of. Do You Mean It, Elihu? 2 "It is time to put an end to the dictatorship which we| d in order to aid in winning the war.” said Elihu Root in a “keynote” speech to a republican ttorship!” Have we been living under a dictator-| 7 the constitution really been set aside? Has government really had power of life and death over | citizens? Has freedom been abrogated? Have people put in jail for opinions, contrary to their constitu-| rights? | it true that certain people who are now behind the! are not criminals, but really are “political prisoners”?! is it Elihu Root now who is authority for such state- nts? Root, who was counselor for Thomas F. Ryan d the tobacco trust? Root, whose name has stood for! wvatism if not for reaction for a generation? Is it) ir. Root who is making the statement in public that “we” ted a dictatorship? “We”—a conspiracy between the esentatives of the two great parties in congress—a ition” to set aside the regular processes of government to seize autocratic power? _ A little while back people were arrested and put into jail saying what Mr. Root is saying. | Federal reserve board opines that the “orgy of spec- ulation” hasn't been checked. We should say Ae Fast this morning we saw a fellow buy two pounds of bacon, all at one lick. Husband’s Morals <a Glen Campbell is a little town in Pennsylvania. Few ps have heard of it. But 66 of its leading women DO to “put it on the map.” For they have formed secret society there, the purpose of which is to “know} n morally,” and the scope of the lodge includes hus-| ds and husbands intended. ' That sounds like something now. It behooves men in| hat community to walk with some circumspection, for the rganizs tion proposes to clean up the morals of its neigh- ’ Especial attention is to be given to the morals of bands. There’s to be a moral credit bureau kept, and wife can go there and get a confidential report and a on her husband. Brides-to-be may also secure in- tion there that may interest them. says there should be a similar society i every emmy. She declares that if wcicuart ‘at. r ity. She declares that if women “at- ‘ivoree calendar would be as crowded as the old-time rhoo r} r all events, the idea is interesting. And all mot =e Campbell may be depended Fk ~ Pp j “America first” is to be the slogan of Senator Hiram o siden: ‘8 a safe bet the United States were confronted ° THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1920. EVERETT TRUE —By CONDO \\~ 1 S&© We SUCTAN OF TURKEY IS GOING tO GET RID oF SOME OF HIS Wives TO Rebucs THE HIGH COST of UvING, POLY GAMOVLS — REPROBATS I [ mig SG (There's a raisin) Sholmes’ thought was « ng cise, Maxine, the beauti had sent him on a hot womet! ful client, scent It was not for the beautiful Max tne—ahe of the red ruby and limpid blue that Herk seeking her husband, Jack For several nights hand running Jack had been sitting up with a sick friend somewhere on Fifth ave., be tween Pike and Union w wick friend? she live in the Penn. (More tomorr cee Daniels demands a bigger navy. That's toe bad. Our euija board tells us the supply of medals has been completely exhausted. ps ” The sheriff in Fort nh, Tex / —ANO HO'S GOING (IN THE RIGHT Direction + FoR PERMANENT * PEACE, Too, YC THINK $) we ~ok was And did He BSEeCcrise HE'S GoT THES RIGHT (DEA, SAW !! ‘and bers insist | Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Biug, U. 8 Public Health Bervtee nday arrest most of the unpa who sing outside of churches, for him. If he wii shoe dealer who would send for it and have it set tn a ring. eee YOU WRITE A HEADLINE FOR IT ‘The marriage of Mise Pauline Shorten Stout of Pocatello wil) take | place Wednesday tm Sait Lake City.— and Albert Sait Lake (Utah) Tribune eee * Sign in Tacoma: “Livery Feed Stable. Special Attention Puid to Traveling Men.” One in Seattle: nealled Pan oe There are rumors of an approach ing thread shortage to the severe winter, which made it necessary to # time In California. But, as the night watchman remarked, “I never chewed a joor, but I've bolted a lot of them.” DK. J. RK. BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.60 GLASSES on Earth Woe are one of stores in the grind lenses a and we are th ly in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. Examination free, by graduate op- tometrist. Glasses’ not unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVENUB hwe t to Anish, 15c 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15c 15¢ 15¢ 15c 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15c 15c Real Coffee HOYT'S 322 Pike at 4th We Never Close we're a Due, probably, | nd a great deal of the few optical that really Prescribed WHEN TO DISINFECT wh barges and ee Distn tec divease coughing. Prevent the « others by holding a cloth before the| for nose and mouth when sneezing or hawking. Alw the hands thoroly after t been solled or have had « tunity to be soiled by iach from the nose, throat, lungs, der or bowel Even healthy peo ple, expecially when they have been in contact with some case of com municable disease, often germs of dinease. nooner inte ed, the if v being dissemin | gers, feet, Mies, dust or ¢ The natural disint |iieht, fresh air and ¢ acted, If permitted te the course of the {lr nec an epithe a oma. ekin cough ft. If you will ful pa et ent carry the) Which tious material ts (Advertisement) leumably there is not much Infe tion remaining at the time of*recov ery. The results room fumt gation after contagious diseases has been abandoned bave apparently been as good as where this proced ure ia practiced and the money and effort thus saved have been ava where able for other purpores. The disinfector must know when. where and how to disinfec r ing an acute act am disinfec becomes able self must act as when he is read i uld jer the im | @ qualified On of in which} fumes bie sulphur or upon quantity of formaldeheyde gas in sufficient even to inhibit the growth of the most ordinary micre an Jisms—with the real cleansing lotes of soap and r, fr and sunshine red? noxious a exh al entirely ignc ANSWERED I have a peculiar sc e head ne seab and ® hea but then the a6 and there is a sore underneath but I am worrle I am ab comes does not pain because it is getting larger. ——S Cooking, Mating and Baking Winter white Pear. less. main Apples ipitzenberg Apples Delicious Apples | Rome Beauty Apples Chelan Apples | Winesap Apples | at vholesale and Retatt 7 ple in Seattle, Go to Stall No. 60, downstal the Westlake Mar ‘ask it ‘that . Dr. Kdwin J, Bro etal, if you ples, potatoes, nuts. r one to think that the tr ould It be? 1 lead That is the name cancer. tled Do » him tom ot be med, but go at once to a good advise an re X-raye| Do not at-| dition me your 4 address I shall eend you “Cancer. ry Adult Should Knc your: | name | & help. acts bs | LET'S have lunch at Boldt's today On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Facts re Prohibition BY DK. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) It might be just as well to pause in our wrath and consider the following Fourteen Points re Prohibition 1. It is Legal. The right of Government to regulate id to prohibit the use of in- toxicants is as well settled as any principle of law can be. 2. This Law is not Sudden has been passing anti-liquor laws for 90 years, and these have been fought, and courts have passed upon them, every step of the way. 3. Prohibition has been enacted in the only way possible, by Constitutional Amend- ment. We have abolished Booze precisely as we abolished Slavery. 4. This method guarantees against rash passionate popular action, For in a popular vote the people might have been misled by demagogues or fanatics; in the low process of amending the Constitution that was impossible. It is the very purpose of this slow process to prevent stampede. 5. The U. S. A. is an organized Republic, not a Town Meeting. The People get their will thru Representatives, not by Mobs. 6. It was every man’s privilege to oppose Prohibition while it was not yet a law; now to oppose and objurgate it savors of bad sports. Precisely as we all had a right to oppose the War BEFORE Congress declared War, but AFTERWARD such an act savored of treason. The American rule is: When licked, look pleasant. Fr three great Forces that put Pro- hibition across are Science, Moral Sentiment, and Business. All these finally condemned The country the use of alcohol as prejudicial to the wel- | fare of society. &. Fanaticism had nothing to do with the final result, There were cranks, extremist and wild men on both sides; but these w not the people whom the Senate and lawyers and three-fourths of the State Legislatures were afraid of. 9. Personal Liberty is a Relative, not an Absolute, right. Only on a desert island can Personal Liberty be unrestrained. In Civilization you may not spit on the car floor, drive on the left side of the street, smoke in meeting, carry a revolver, expose your person, nor do y one of forty other things which some regard as strictly their own business. The common sense of this people has decided that taking a drug which may deprive one of his senses and make him dangerous, is not a Personal Right. 10. The Prohibition Law will probably be violated. So have been the law entitling Negroes to vote and the laws against burglary, arson, and murder. 11. If the People want booze back they can have it—the same way they got rid of it. Why fret? 12. While many rash and violent state- ments have been made, while a certain meas- ure of injustice may have been done, while fanatics on both sides may have screamed, we must remember that this Law was enacted, not by any Tyrant, but by the sovereign will of a free people, in the way prescribed by the Constitution, the funda mental law of the land; that it might have been defeated anywhere along the road had the majority of the people so willed; that it is your country and your law, and it is your duty to obey it. 13. We deported the Reds because they so hated the will of the people here that they wanted to blow up the place. The roads to Europe and Cuba are still open. If you don’t like the U. S. A. you can get out. 14. This Constitutional Amerdment will in future years be regarded as the su- premest act of self restraint and intelligent self-government ever enacted by a free peo- ple, in deliberate and dignified process of | law. Editor, U. 8. Washington Address Information Public Health Service, pb. ¢ to prescribe for Addreme ONCLE SAM, M.D,” will anewee, dither in this colame or by mm t “second helping” kind— There are always requests for more when you serve Det MonTe Beans with Pork and Tomato Sauce. Their distinctive goodness ap- peals to every appetite, and they are as whole- some and nutritious as they are tempting to the taste. But more than that—they’re the kind of food you can afford to serve liberally in these days of high living costs—for De. MonrTE Beans are truly economical. While they contain more food value than meat or eggs, they cost much That’s one reason why thrifty house- CALIFORNIA PACKING CORPORATION San Francisco, California wives are today serving DEL Monte Beans more frequently than ever before. Why not try them for dinner tonight instead of meat. But be sure they are DEL MONTE Beans, because they're different from ordinary baked beans—better! The Det MonTE meth- od of cooking with the inimitable DEL MONTE Tomato Sauce gives them a distinctive flavor not found in any other beans. ways to IN FORMATIC Impossible for him to answer quel thos of & purely personal mature, of individual diseases, EDITOR, 5. Public Health Services, Washingtoo, D.C. Send for this new book “Det Monre Recipes of Flavor” and learn 500 simple and economical serve better meals. It is free. Ad- dress Department N, Horlick’s Malted Milk far dnist.ad Ihe, TPR ORIETR TOTO ARIA NP EVP TE FFM WARNE PAE NF UFNE TAYE RPT California Packing Corporation,SanFran- PRAT Oe Tn Te ee cisco, California,