The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 16, 1920, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PR a SE ale uta sect i - The Seattle Star month; # months, Peear, $5.00, in the mail, 1.50 Mm. Outside the # 3.90 By ; € months, $2.76 tate of Washington. bo per month. $4.60 for ¢ months or per year By carrier, clty, 12 per week. out of city, 0c — sericea ] A Misstep, Mr. Mayor! ‘aldwell’s letter of dismissal of Thomas F. Mur- 5 _. papeeiabendant of public utilities, following on e heels of the latter’s resignation, is, to say the least, the act of a boor, It was wholly uncalled for, and, conse- quently, can only reflect upon the and balance of the new mayor. . To start out upon his administration in fury and vindie- ‘tiveness, with neither rhyme nor reason to provoke it, is} Be ttable. The city wants a public servant in the mayor’s| chair, not a politician or a perpetual office holder with al chronic grouch. : Retiring Mayor Fitzgerald’s sportsmanship in congratu-| hg the new mayor upon 3 og fine Sates particularly in view of the undeniable fact that he was so viciously crucified on a religious issue a coterie of Caldwell boosters, with never an expression © of repudiation of this ‘sort of thing on Caldwell’s part dur-| é ing @ primaries. ahi The Star wants Mayor Caldwell’s administration to be} “suecessful. It wants it, and it has wanted it for every city ‘administration, in order that the people at large may benefit thereby. But it is no worshipper of any fatted ‘ealf—and whether it is Mayor Caldwell or any other of-| yfeial, his record and deeds will be the sole guide to The| Star's judgment. In all sincerity, The Star hopes that the administration of the city railways in the next two years will be conducted "on as high a plane and with as little “politics” as it was) “conducted under Thomas Murphine in the past 11 months, | the most trying months of the municipal railway enter- But if both parties picked the same candidate there'd be no campaign bar'l for the politicians, and who would t the spoils? Which is why the politicians are against |» oover. good judgment, poige, assuming his duties, stands} . ae teense deemed is Went wm 0 | WE'LL SAY 60 ALS EVERETT TRUE Greetings! Judging from the thing» that wore whispered around here abouts during German party oughy to have a lot of sympalifigers on thin side the war wator, Veo Fi si art oO. W for the 1". (Okie) Cour that pan of the BY THE WAY LL “Saw PRYAN ON THS Srreet THS OTHER Day. PO nee ———— _ =a — HE REMINDS OF THAT [: OTHER Ti—--—~- = Brother Twiss reports that in or der to fool the dry squad he buried it in the back yard, The price of canned goods in going | down. whas has become of all the ex-mem. eee Bhe scratched his face And tore bis hatr fhe battied Hut a nw ih and mall Speaking bers of the Wilson cabinet? This ts a strange world preparations are taxed, but the gov Jernment doesn't collect a cent from jany Bryan’s Against Him | Altho Senator Gilbert H. Hitchock, of Nebraska, is a good | mocrat, he will not receive the presidential nomination of t party, if William Jennings Bryan can prevent it. This has been made very clear in the last issue of Bryan's! per, The Commoner, in which he says the senator's nomina- on would be an insult to many democratic states. It is not because of Hitchcock’s attitude on the League of Nations, or in regard to anything concerning the war that Bry n is so bitter against him, but, he says, because Hitch-| ck voted against the submission of the national prohibition "amendment after Nebraska had voted for constitutional pro- hibition, and also because he refused to follow the advice of Nebraska state legislature and vote for the submission the woman suffrage question. It would seem that Mr. Hitchcock has as strenuous objec- ‘tions to acting on instructions as Mr. Bryan has sometimes r The packers offer to “ with the National Farm Bureau federation. But the farmers want more pay for their livestock. TE Senator Kenyon’s resolution for an inquiry into the possi- bility of purchasing the Bermuda Islands might well be addressed to the Bermudans, themselves. America is ready to buy the Bermudas and all of the West Indies belonging to European powers. But, only on condition that the in- habitants want to become American citizens. Senator Kenyon is wrong in saying the matter is one primarily of naval strategy. True, Great Britain has a ‘naval base in the Bermudas, but so she has at Halifax. faval questions should no more influence discussion of America’s desire for the Bermudas than was the case over / the purchase of the Danish West Indies. America has never felt insecure against a possible naval ‘attack because of foreign ownership of the Atlantic sea- ‘board islands. Every effort to develop an agitation for hase on that ground in the past has failed. It will searcely attach the people of the island to the United States if they are told the navy department and not the d erican nation bids them welcome. They should be "invited into Uncle Sam’s family as human beings, not as _ impersonal centers of strategy. Sentiment is the controlling reason for annexation. The nearness of the Bermudas and the West Indies to the American mainland would make them desirable additions to this federated democracy. But America wants neither white, black nor brown natives of nearby sands to come under the Stars and Stripes in a rebellious mood. 4 st Bi The peace treaty makes almost as complete a job of Turkey as the az does shortly before Thanksgiving. f The Woman and the Judge | ‘The present status of the case of Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes, 4 alist under ten-year sentence, is another demonstration of ridiculous way in which the courts operate. The United Statest district court at St. Louis reverses ~ the verdict on the ground that the trial judge’s charge was C judiced and declares that the article, for publishing which Mrs. Stokes was arrested, “contained in several places a rich) and inspiring exhibition of patriotism.” Mrs. Stokes will get a new trial. Maybe they’ll try her for “rich and inspiring patriotism,” this time, a United States court having charged her with that. But what about the ; Beeps whose prejudice started a woman on a ten-year jail) e? The last person to object to a bonus for soldiers is he who was too busy profiteering during the war to fight. A “ee man for weart member of canned goods Totlet has moved it from his basement and Go AHCAD NOW, FOLKS, YM GOING TO Give MISTER SPOUT. HIS |\COAT AND HAT ANO THEN GACH ONS O© }ys with GoT A CHANCE T SAY SOMETHING is of the British partia ment who owns 4 clothing store in Landon is selling dlothes at $9.96 suit We wish some Seattle clothiers would go into politica, eee Won't somebody please come for: | ward and @arry right away no we can forget all about Mary ft as soon as possible? . R. M. sends it don't belter Which reminds us: Do you remem. | ber the old-fashioned pictures of a goat that used to be bung up about | children Unis that ep Umer? eee How Many Divorces? wae fighting om the Neigian Porch at ‘M. Detfeur froct And his wife would etre out t impertant plece of information Proud leok. She would then recite Affected modesty his marital ex He had teen cited twice Burgiars down tn New York stole|to prevent the child from becom-| & plano. Mebby they were neighbors | ing qverhented or tired by the! and thought stealing it better than|weight of the cle be | |chopping it up. : or Be that as ft may, Pureka Mille) peg is w miller at New Middietown, Ohio. Cheer ‘up! Pretty soon the mud/sides of the tent should not be put will dry and then it'll be ground into dust by auto wheels and biown down | keeping out rain eee your throat, But, as the surgeon remarked, “T| am dignified enough, but here in the pneumonia ts a frequent a hospital I'm a regular cut-up.” Pickford Me hed teen |Open, They should be well clad} treteg ewe OE OE FD BNO | the clothing being heavy enourh| BEST $2.60 GLASSES DAK. J. RB. BINYON Free Examination on Earth © one of the few optical @ Northweat that feally | from start to Anish, he only one in SEATTLE—ON FIKST AVE. Examination free, by graduate op. tometrist. Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1416 FIRST AVENUE Metween Spring and Seneca Vhone Main 1550 “I Won't Fight!” Said the Copperhead | ’ Food for Thought Holland, as well as England, is to join this country in! the tercentenary celebration of the landing of the Pilgrims Ss “GOOD!” id Abraham Lincoln at Cape Cod. The Pilgrims, after they left England, but ;—-=—— ‘before they started for America, settled 12 years at Ley- den, Holland. That's not_ so many miles from where the ex-kaiser is sheltered. Holland’s celebration might provide him food for melancholy thought. He could devote some evening to it when he hasn’t anything worse to worry about. It might | him dolorous satisfaction to trace his defeat, loss of one and exile back to the fact that the Pilgrims didn’t ep, Silonite, exegeed the cap and helped start, the i 4 ¢ 4 Conductoad Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Biwe, U. 8. Publle Health Berets KEEP CHILD IN OPEN AIR In the absence of complications} Q 1 been overseas 22 having whooping-cough montha, and pow am much trow [should be kept tm the open air bied with dandruff and falling out j@uring the day and on a sieeping| of the Bair. Pleage give me a6 night when posible. | x l When these te. ne stesping porch | “DISCOURAGED SOLDIER. A. It i» probable that you are magn A torag poe Retail and Wholees'= Cooking, Fating an@ Baking Winter Apples ere Apples Delicious Apples of Rome Beauty Apples Chelan Apples Winesap Applea have to prevent chilling and light enough | As long as ¢ r is weak, 1 When do Jon the roof, in t Pear- jbe place down except for the purpose th jahould be so arranged ers cannot be kicked It should be remember nd Retail apples will ous complication of w cough and that cases with dency to bronchitis sbould not be unduly exposed. Cool, not cold. fresh alr, in what the same ¢ ple in Seattle On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be Mo Compromise The Cities to Be BY DK, PK (Copyright, 1920, Mankind, and especially in the United , States, is tiptoeing on the brink of the sreatest discovery of history. It is the discovery of the colossal ad- | vantages of Socialization. | We know already the value of co-opera- | ion. But we do not realize it, we don’t | really feel the idea, it has not got into our’| bones. Some day wes shall awake suddenly to what co-operation means. And it will be as | if a world had overnight passed from the | primitive savagery of the naked Indian to | the polished civilization of the Metropolitan | Opera House. a tepee along the Platte River into the Ritz-Carlton, For our imagination simply cannot grasp | the enormous strides we shall make when we learn to, or dare to, quit competition in production and distribution once and forever and give our hearts wholly to team-work. In the first place our wealth will be be- yond the wildest dreams. We shall have |“something to do with.” And we shall go up and make real the impossible with all | the gaiety of adventure, For at present fully nine-tenths of the | fruits of energy are wasted fighting one | another. We still cling to the childish super- stition that competition in the labor ef our hands is necessary, and that without it we | should not have efficiency; a belief worthy to rank with witcheraft, original sin and trial by torture. One day we shall be born again, and hav- | ing a new spirit, enter into the kingdom It will be as if we came from | ANK CRANE by Vrank Crame) Then what cities we shall build. these we have now must come down; they are ugly, insanitary, absurd. New Yor for instance, will be one uniform, beautifi house, planned on a single artistic idea, glittering domicile for one human famil; from the Battery to Yonkers, with hund. of Woolworth buildings, spires and dot and toWers crowding the sky, with pet of cowrts and open spaces of greenery, acres of roof-playgrounds for children, the whole structure adorned by the craft of People and not dance attendance upon ti privileged few. And there will be hundreds of New Yorks | | dotted over the land, beautiful sea-cities at | Boston, New Orleans, Galveston, San Diego, © San Francisco, heavenly mountain cities in | the Alleghanies, the Rockies and the Sierras, lake cities at Chicago, Buffalo, Clevel: | Duluth, besides plain-cities, forest-cities river-cities. Transportation shall be mainly by the | ocean of the air, which shall be made as safe as by land or water. only in the play of men’s minds, such sport, science, art and the like, while com- petition in work shall have been forgotten, as a dreadful dream, with its strikes, pau- pers, millionaires, arm tariffs, benumb- ing labor and overfed privilege. For our children’s children will WANT THE COMMON GOOD and get as much } delight from seeking it as we now get from pride and precedence. | Some day! of achievement without wasté. . lentitied to free medical care and | service under the provisions of the | jwar risk act. If you will send me |your mane and address, I will tell | you how to make application for treatment | - | i 9 Horlick’s Original Brokea lenses short notice at | sate Wiest Ave, ara datctisee end Sevoniteten in desired, and in stormy weather the patient should be kept in a room at about 60 nheit, if there e bronchitis or pneu FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BIG Fruit Trees In Quantity, Variety pasimuch as dust provokes the paroxysma of coughing, it necessary to sprinkle the roof or yard in which the child ts kept ‘Thb diet should be such as can be easily and quickly digested Soups, pasteurized milk, exes and the like should be given fi ly, The matter of the tr of the disease in one to be left to |the physician attending the indi vidual case, may be 25,000 im 200 Leading Varieties YES! NURSERY STOCK OF ALL ae KINDS ANSWERED Q. Please send me pamphlets on tright’s disease, and tell me if a yerson who shows a slight trace of albumin can be cured. A. We have no pamphlets deal Phone ing with Bright’s disease, and we = Elliott 4325 can only give you very general i) ¢ advice regarding diet. In trying! e to deterthine the character and se a verity of the disease, one does not! M L (@) rely #0 much on the quantity of| albumin in the urine as on the! K, character of the sediment, as re-| vealed by the microscope. In ad-| dition to this, a careful inquiry into the symptoms and an exami n of other organs in the body, jally the heart and arteries, cessary, * | ATILIZERS ALS éRDER SERVICE Send for Mianting Guide and Price List oof ofo}oofoyofolofoyopoyofopoyoy “John B, Price & Co, Where Safety 4] Dwells.” What does that mean to you as an investor? Relief from financial worry; a feeling of safety? That ts the meaning. INCOME TAXES for 1919 were paid yenterday in practically every case, Many persons delayed making out their reports until the last We were enabled to help many of them tax difficulties, and wish to m for having given us the TAX FREE SECURITIES are in offering * th than ever before. Our bond t rithes ed by us atand th # they do the three standards by which are judg Solid security, easy convertimiity and su tial net yield P_ djojojojojojojajojojolojoajojajofojojo) } ‘ Electrical Ry toasted or It, dF t When Food SOME CZ EM Al Years of ex- perience Im fitting | and makiog— gleseca, and our low operating ex- pense, enable us to make better Classes for less) money. | Qupiicated om | reduced pricea | is ONLY SKIN DEEP No Interns! andletne will care Resema. O by the application of CRANULENE, the exter) iy, can the Examination | ‘Malted Milk | Schooumaker etd BARTELL DRUG COMPANY, ALL STORES Bills Climb . Use More 34° Rolled Oats In porridge at breakfast, in meat substitutes at luncheon, in desserts at dinner. : Where g@* Rolled Oats are served less meat or | other food containing protein will be needed. Protein is our most important food, and usually most expen- — sive. form. RH Rolled Oats contain more protein to a pound than steak. Send for our new #4 Rolled Oats and gs Pancake Flour Cook Book by Isabelle Clark Swezy. It contains 77 new ways to use Rolled Oats and Address our home Pancake Flour. office, West Waterway, Harbor and, Seattle. FISHER FLOURING SEATTLE TACOMA nite Ad pranks hss se PORTLAND It may just as well be served in an economical Escalloped Salmon. 1 tall can salmon (or cooked fresh salmon). 4 2 cups cooked FISHER'S ROLLED OATS. 1 poonful salt. % teaspoonful pepper. 1 cup crumbs. % cup celery cut fine (or omit). 1 tablespoonful minced onton. % cup butter or less, 1 cup milk. Melt 1 tablespoonful of the butter and add onion, cooking to golden brown, Mix all ingredients, turn tnto greased baking dish or | casserole, cover top with fine, dry buttered crumbs and’ bake in a moderate oven 30 minutes, Isl- MILLS COMPANY BELLINGHAM MT. VERNON All artists of the future, who shall serve The #% There will be plenty of competition but=

Other pages from this issue: