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The Seattle Star mail, out of city, 6c per month: ™, ¥ Ay $2.78; ty PERS tor ¢ uontha, carrier, city, 12¢ per week. Roger W. Babson, the noted business observer and expert, has just spent a month visiting factories—great and small ent stores, publishing plants and other great busi- ness establishments. In every case he talked to their owners or eral managers. The most important question he put to these men was: “What quality do you like best in the men who work for you? How do you pick men for promotion? Listen to the answers he got: fi ~4 “We promote those who are most interested in their " : ” “We pay for enthusiasm and not for time. “We pay most for new ideas.” “Those who like their work are the ones who get ahead 7 ben 02. . sas * “Enthusiasm, imagination and initiative are the qualities Do you get to the eternal limit what this means? Babson did not get such answers as the following: _ “We like to promote gentlemen.” : “We prefer to give the best places to the owners’ and ‘bosses’ sons.” “High places in our business are reserved for men with ” . ch answers were given at all. Everywhere these big okey men wanted qualities for promotion that ANY UNG MAN CAN HAVE if he only makes the effort. If you like your work you are in line for promotion. If you have enthusiasm, they'll pick you. . x If you think—use your brains—they’ll push you straight ladder. : hs all up to you. It does not matter whether you are of ly birth or not. It doesn’t matter whether you wear a low-tail or an overall. And you don't have to have a education. ; word, it’s equal opportunity, equal rights, the golden America, the paradise of the common in of equality. vit ublicity to the important information he picked oy his” foie, Bibeoe has done an immensely valuable to the people of this country and his story should be oned across this land in box car letters. imist is the man who belives income is sure to catch aed pose outgo on the home stretch of the cost of living race. Greetings! Only 261 days left td pay your Income tax eee That chap Perry Cunningham, who must be married by March 31 or lose $25,000, has our sympathy actually trying to do it eee | ‘Think ‘of what could be bought for $25,000—even at $25 a quart! eee Henry says he'd like to meet a girl with $26,000, more or leas, who's in the mood to exchange photos; ob Ject, matrimony divorces on another page of thin paper, our guess is that about half the girls who get married these days do x0, object, alimony. eee We wish to deny the report that the two income tax bandits have been caught eee Attorney General Palmer's de. partment of justice urges the people to buy cheaper cuts of meat. That would make a splendid campaign slo gan for Palmer if he runs for prest dent. Think how a crowd could be enthused by a political procession in which are banners and transparen “Buy the cheaper cuts.” eee Lloyd George declares Great Brit tain will not sell any of ite islands in the West Indie, Such being the case, we withdraw our bid. eee STILL FIGHTING Read Uncle Tom's letter in this Paper and then reflect upon the fact that we have a Yankee at the head of our state university and notwith standing our fathers fought a bloody four-year war to keep our Southland for themselves and thetr posterity We are constantly on our knees beg ging the Yankee to come here, yen, paying them to come. They come with their Yankee notions and ab- breviated morals and preach their! sneaking propaganda among the youth of the community. Only a few days ago a fellow was here from ‘Ohio to consider an offer from the Community Y. M. C. A-—Rowan (N. C) Record. eee A New York actress mys there are) ber, songs and telephone numbers. PICTURE SHOW ANDO S(T BEHINID Some BIRD Hat MOvES His HEAD AROUND LIKE A WILD CANARY | - more than that on Saturdays and |lonty two things she tries to remem.| CoMducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Bive, U. &. Public Health Series On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Curiosities of the Pay Roll BY DK. FRANK CKANE (Copyright, 1920, by Frank Crane) | We have been so long accustomed to hear- \ing that the Laboring Man is a poor, down- trodden, underpaid serf, and that the fellows who wear white cuffs and work with pens and the like get the most pay and have the easiest time, that it may jolt us a little to consider these facts, as I find them in a recent daily paper: School teachers, after eight years’ train- ing, start at $18 a week, and after three years get $1,000 a y * Window washers get $50 a week, whether they work or not, and in rainy weather are |paid just the same. Two items appeared some time ago in| |the want ad column of one of the papers; |one was for a school teacher who was of- \fered $65 a month; the other was for a |Negro barber who was guaranteed $100 a month. No reflections of course upon the colored man nor upon the ancient and hon- orable business of shaving; but the query arises, is cutting hair so much more valu- able to society than training children? Firemen, who keep the city safe, who | have to be citizens and pass civil service ex- |aminations, receive at the start $1,900 a 36 a week. procure places where they make $90 ja week, Mail carriers, who tramp the streets in all weather with heavy packs, who get to pensions, draw only $34 a week. Painters now are getting a dollar an hour with double for overtime, averaging $72 a week. Bank clerks, to whom is entrusted the handling of the city’s millions, in real get $30 a week or less. Bricklayers, with experience enough to hold a union card, get $10 a day. a Bookkeepers, on whose accuracy the city’s business. depends, gets $35 a week. Truck drivers now are making $50 4 week. Policemen, the city’s guardians, who Fy ys for their uniforms, too, have to do it om” $36 a week. Tailors and cutters, who can’t speak the English language, are making fromm $65 to = $125 a week. Fe Time was when we appealed to boys to work away at their books, stick to their schooling and by all means get an educa- % tion, and added as an inducement that by so doing they would earn more when grown up. But how about it, when John spends 8 years in common school and high school, 4 ~ years in college, and 4 years more in pro © fessional school, and then finds himself not earning as much in his gentlemanly call- ing as James, who quit bothering with his mind at the age of 14 and went to be a@ plumber’s apprentice? i 4 pour them into the blood by|Perhaps you keep your room too(scribe. If the fresh atr does not help s of the thoracic duct ree fats digest. important source of body heat. of|warm and insufficiently ventilated.| him, it ‘s possfble that his arteries — ‘They constitute |That 4s one of the most common|requtre attention. Better have him causes of drowsiness, such as you de-|see a doctor. | night (2) My left ear bothers me with | const. ringing. I have no symp- toma of catarrh, What shall I do? () My husband, who ts 55 years of age, and apparently healthy, falls lasleep eisily, even when we have company. He works eight hours a |day in an automobile shop. Gets} seven hours of sleep regularly and | Sundays. What may be the trouble? Q What would you advise for a| “ 9 fa} | dry, pecling ekin on the feet? Some NAME BA Y ER | times they feel uncomfortably hot at Paid by Non-Christian Japs =" oe ene ‘numbers DECAY OF THE TEETH A, Teta not pouste from the | brief description you give to deter- bells tinkle along the Pacific | bers but we nearly always forget DECAY OF THE TEETH sen date from the time when ft Was) in. the nature of the trouble with | them before the operator answers us| Decay of the teeth, also mpoken|belleved that the blood required] 1 is a that der why their y a At the |YOUr feet. It is suggested that you} ee of as “dental caries,” ia caused by| “purifying” every spring t bathe them every night in hot water, Former Columbia stodenta have|th® actions of germs of bacteria| present time we believe more by at | on a tan with very been making a canvass and they|Which lodge upon the lens pry foto ee weerligd suck | cold duke, tata tev the feet, then = he ; ; i have found 9,672 voters in 28 parts of a tooth. As a result of their | hygienic measures aa exercise in | procew o tt ne Rapes They may wonder why congressional immigration com- Guo eailea taiede of Shamenen es growth the tooth structure is moft-|open air, sleeping with windows open. rine md > orca hago pon Htees failed to make a complete survey of the situation) oi) preaident of Columbia, foc |eed, allowing the succeeding gener-|regular brushing of the teeth and) Dous oot oO 5 eae ea Seattle in 1920, when the birth rate of Japanese babies} president of the United States of tons of bacteria to penetrate further jeare ot ihe hewsle ie vant Shed mies fom = mted to 29 per cent in one week, as in Seattle during] America: We suggest that if Dr, |into the tisues of the tooth, fd goad | cm Ee eunet cates steaing tn te Pe ’ Butler conti to be a} It will be notiosd that decay usu-| iad to send you a little booklet en- eon} “Rayer Tablets of Aspirin” to be|relieve Colds, Headache, Toothache’ t_week. aire ern nathOn he le a nuGAt® | qity boxing either In the little «roves | titled, “The Road to Health,” which |ears is due to some internal inflam- iP reiteve \s, Headache, may wonder why the lesson of Hawaii failed to ae pay an amuse | tn the surface used in chewing, | Will probably be better for you than|mation in the ear, and this may have|#enuine must be marked with the | Parache, the Pacific coast. There are Shinto and Buddhist but which, becauso of their depth |@my quantity of sulphur and mo-|resulted from a cold in the head. If|safoty “Bayer Cross.” Then you) ™Atism, ? When Buddhist temple % our sons and daughters may won thy thei rs and mothers were blind to Japanese colonization in lanacn, Pain gene y. i e i Ww are not well scoured by the food in| nples in Ha’ today. One answer will be buried deep in the dusty archives at “Washington, D. C., where the records of immigration com- Mittees are entombed. ' For the records show that Japanese—most of them non- Christians—sent paid agents to the nation’s capital ‘tell the men who make the laws that the church people of the Pacific Coast do not want Japanese restriction. For that’s the story of Rev. U. G. Murphy of Seattle, ‘chief exponent of Japanism. Paid by non-Christian Japs, ‘he’s been telling congress that the church people of the want even naturalization and citizenship accorded to A daily dose of the hoe is a remedy for the garden fever in any but the most obstinate cases, which nothing > btu weed-pulling in July will cure. They’re Souring on Us ' Many very good people maintain that America’s former ; _,exclusiveness cannot be re-established; that we've got to| F take part in and give certain moral support to foreign gov- nments, including the dear chronic pauper governments; that, internationally, we have got to be the blue ribbon} mixer. All this under the obsession that, having rescued from the Hun, it is our high moral duty to take a in running Europe. * F Let us consider our present standing with our European , “associates,” or whatever else they may be called. Italy is mad at us and getting madder every day. _*A large part of Japan is chronically hostile to us, for rea- sons long standing. ‘ ' The English know that there is a strong element in our midst that is always stirring up deviltry in British imper- ' And now our administration has sourcd the French by ly declaring that “the French militarist party is now control.” Some nations are born exclusive, some achieve exclusive- and some have exclusiveness thrust upon them. We've) thru the first two experiences and darned if it doesn’t to look as if we'd be in the third before long! Why worry about the reported perfume shortage? Tezas is preparing to sweeten the atmosphere with 4,000 carloads of 1920 onions. ] _ “Painting is a mode of expression as vivid’ as writing,” Bays John Sloan, president of the Society of Independent Artists. “No one, even if illiterate, would wish to admit he cannot4 _ But many assert with satisfied smiles that they ‘i ww nothing whatever about art.” Artists lose by that. But the one who loses most by any a: failure to understand an art is that person himself. fainting, music and poetry exist to give pleasure. The one who shuts his mind to an art deprives himself of the pleas- ure others find in it. The greatest pleasures are not always those which cost most. One man may obtain greater pleasure from a visit to an art lery than another, who lacked understanding, fido.000, in from lifelong possession of pictures worth : Franklin Lane believes sthe nation’s capital is “rich in _ brains.” But those politicians are too miserl, Sa ihe, hateet ee? Ore Se eing ‘ UNCHAINED , Or elme at the point where) Bryant Evans was unloosed from | one tooth adjoins another. This point his home Friday after being housed|also falls to receive the in several weeks because of small-|which the more exposed parts of a/#ent? pox.—Milledgevillé (1) Free Preas. | tooth recetves. 4. ee Q—What organ separates the fats scouring OF Olle from the water? In the Intestine are tiny glands, means visit @ good nome and throat) Do fats di-|such a specialist can be consylted. (2) So far as your husband's drows- | over 18 years. the trouble persists, you should by all/ are getting the true, world-famous Handy tin baxes of twelve tablete specialist, or a dispensary, where | Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for! cost but a few cents. Druggists sells larger “Rayer” packages, Always buy an unbroken package|in is the trade mark of Bayer ines 18 concerned, it is ponsible that |of “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which | ufacture of Monoaceticacidester Now as the thicknons of the enamel ;the lactealn which absorb the fats he in not getting sufficient fresh air.‘ contains proper directions to safely | Salicylicac “You can't take riches with you/is the same upon the aide of the| when you die," annaunees John D.| tooth toward the tongue or lip and Rockefeller Jr. This will be discour-| upon the side toward the adjoining aging news to J.D. R Sr. teeth, and, as its quality is also the INFLUENZA starts with a Cold same, we may mafely conclude that if lthe surface toward the adjoining | teeth could be kept as clean and well polished as are those more exposed, they, too, would be practically free from decay. This in well assured, as bacteria will not grow upon a pol- ished surface. In some of the ancient skulls ex amined, it was found that the sur. faces which make contact with other QUININ teeth in the mame jay were highly polished by the slight individual mo- Uon of each tooth In ite socket as hard pressure waa brought to bear ROMID upon it and was thus rubbed against Standard cold remedy for 20 yters | its neighbor. 0 =a sure, sian so 8 cae ANSWERED day Mines’ back if it fails. ‘The | Q—What is the dose to be taken of genuine bor has @ Red| sulphur and molasses? How lone | op Ath ME Mille | should it be taken and of what 004 | in tt? At All Drag Stores A. Tee of sulphur and molas | If you pay more for ceylon than for TREE TEA Ceylon you are wasting money. TREE TEA Ceylon is a blend of the choicest mountain grown teas. You cannot buy better quality. The guarantee on TREE TEA Ceylon is the same as on the famous M. J. B. Coffee, both packed by M. J. Brandenstein & Co. Office and Warehouse, 313 Occidental Aves, Beattle Seafe Milk wMFANTS wa AVALIDS ASK Por. Horlick’s The Original Avoid Imnitations Forlnfants, Iavalidsand Growing Children | Rich milk, malted ns i the tor All Ageal fe milk, vat “eormiesnnnas ohare Malted Horlicks V5 al ways When unexpected guests drop in for luncheon or tea, it is but the work of a moment to prepare a delicious salad or tasty sandwiches with Deu Monte Beans. In Det Monte Beans with Pork and Tomato Sauce you have a food of many convenient and economical uses—a satisfying dish that takes the place of meat at luncheon, din- ner or supper—a ready-to-serve ac- cessoryin the making of many other tasty and dainty food combinations. Greater in food value ee meat or eggs, yet costing very much less, Det Montz Beans make food econ- omy easy. Keep-a supply on hand and serve them often. CALIFORNIA PACKING CORPORATION ‘Sam Francisce, California