The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 24, 1920, Page 6

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out ef city, 6e per mon € montha $2.76 r of Washington ete, per month, $4.50 for & months or 9. year. Hy carrier, city, 1k per week. EVERETT TRUE Russian “reds’—com- If it is desirable to get rid of of Russian workers munists and members of the Union - ‘and many timid people think it is) there are better ways i ay by holding them indefinitely in American jails. / Since the sailing of the so-called “Soviet Ark” not a single Russian “red” has been deported. Some have been ex $8: amined and their deportation recommended. Many have heen released on the deposit of $1,000* Liberty bonds About 150 are detained at Ellis island and several hundred are in jails in different parts of the country. oy These people are eithet innocent or guilty. They are either trustworthy and valuable workmen, or they are ad vocates of Bolshevist revolution. But whichever they are, they are entitled to have their cases pissed on. They should be either deported or freed. It is semi-officially reported from Washington that there _ will be no more viet Arks”—that is, special government _ transports devoted to the exclusive task of deporting certain aliens. The trip of the Buford is said to have cost half @ million dollars. If it cost $500,000 to deport 249 “reds,” how much would it cost to deport 3,000? ‘ The papers in these cases are stacked up in the Wash- offices of the departments of justice and labor. Mr. rombie, representing Attorney General Palmer, and Mr. Caminetti, representing Secretary William B. Wilson, have the papers before them. It is up to them to order the aliens deported or released. If the government does not wish to act, or is unable ~ to act, or is unwilling to incur the expense, there is another way open. These aliens have ail petitioned to be allowed leave the United States at their own expense, Let out and they will go. Secondly, the Russian soviet tative in Washington, Ludwig C. A. Martens, has to deport them at the expense of his government. Thirdly, a formal offer has been made hy Charles Recht, eney for the communist party, of a ship to deport any communists who are not wanted in the United WHICH A CHICKEN CAN'T STAND UP 7 Zz CAN'T You'Re NOT STAND $ If there is any good faith in this activity of Attorney Palmer and his satellites, they will accept one or other of these offers and dispose of these cases. Say government officials to the people, and say the lsople to the government officials: You're too extrava- gant. Both are right. For Mothers ‘Expenditures for care in sickness show a remarkable in- ‘as soon as incomes rise above the merest living wage. is cannot mean that prosperity brings more sickness that people waste their money on doctors and nurses | ; they enjoy poor health. It means that families! CAUSE OF WHOOPING-COUGH an income sufficient to purchase only the bare necessi-| For a long time the cause of) smoking during bustness hours have catarrh, maney whooping-cough was unknown, of life are going without the medical and nursing care | (oe ee een that the they actually need. |sponsibie for the disease is a small, “When mothers and babies do not have this care they die. | rod-snaped bacterium, which occurs ut skilled care is beyond the reach of many. Of more than|!" the sputum several daye before get rid « babies studied by the federal children’s bureau in|‘te Patient besins to whoop apd] a 7 cities only one in 10 was in a family where the father’s| site whooping ceases ngs allowed a fair minimum of comfort. ‘The exact period of incubation ts ers whose husbands’ earnings are comparatively | ®t Known. Observations seem te) “lw must put up with inferior care for themselves and |!" ‘east plein tren ike pe children. They swell the numbers of preventable| time that the germ lodges in the nal and infant deaths. Adequate protection of these |tndividual to the time tha. first and children is to be found only in public provisions | Pe, ae Be ae: t “The Sheppard-Towner bill for the protection of maternity berg slypinacans chow mang ples ‘and infancy proposes that public health nurses, public in-|»ervous coughs, which have a ten in the hygiene of maternity and infancy, public — ter cena: ta+@-serten. ‘Fhts eoitan. clinics and health centers be made available thru | *o\00n\", ‘Rersiam™ may tare 6 federal aid to the several states. Its passage would provide |; @ dignified public service which could be used with self- snd © Fespect by all mothers. a but! Q 1 worm re muck vain it ures ten have n my mind. sgh has ceased, ferer endeavors to fill up| * | its lungs again, but there in a nerv lous spasm of the muscles of the Seattle bakers rise to assert that Arthur Capper, Kan- | on en rrown the opening | gas senator, is all wrong when he says they they get |inru whien tt poste a ee $42.10 or thereabout for a barrel of flour. Wholesale price nets about $26.60, they say. Arthur, if you don't cut this out, we're goin’ to quit quoting you in our edi- torial column. A Value of Virtue _ An English judge has placed a value on virtue. band, he decided, has a right to compensatory damages in _ money against a man who is responsible for wrecking his| home. But, in order to claim such damages, the husband) q himself must be blameless. | cream It is a good doctrine. It establishes a single code of ;“°"’ morals in divorce actions. It says that men must be held) i400 ov oripanon to the same strict definition of decency to which they hold | rarely does. The trow ‘women, and requires them to enter court with “clean hands.”| can be remedied #0 But, curiously enough, this English judge—Justice eg oe " Cardie—has gone a long way to place women on an equality| Shouia have milk reeuint ' with men in the basic law on divorce. And the English| @ How many whould a law says that a wife cannot bring a similar action against|man Umit himself to if he smokes > @ woman who has lured her husband to misconduct or has|"°,“qrets Or ™ pipe? John gubmitted to his advances. The wife, it seems, has no} fora.quarter,” for most men such right of control or claim to a husband's services as is| wer to this question Is possessed by a husband with regard to the wife. ‘or ig|'¥ determined by individual circum she, by law, supposed to have the power of consent: hus-| (ore aioe in tophece ia an band’s damages are based on “trespass.” tasty tataeiide, add’ it-le hy It takes a long time to break down the barriers which | ‘lly 4 rule which prohibits man has erected for his own indulgence. The law yields|~ ek slowly to the theory that a husband owes as much fidelity to a wife as a wife to her husband. But it will finally In some ca | diseane rec its nar If the child is kept oxyams occur leas |may be brougt lation of dust ulet, the par on of benefit jan will care to r ~|some qualified paychiatri “UNCLE SAM, M.D.” either in this colum | quently v A hus-| may caw the In tary passage of urine or fecen, ANSWERED Does too 1 serve to br stipa- | U.S. Public Meatth In some persons milk doen | Cream very | “You take a b ” finger in it for wwever, that it | your drinking | take expecially The of that rularly cigars Hende “nix the an Raptiat ening while automatical The German politician must be having an awful time keeping his hat on straight, with his head in it. Getting Old? Feel like the weight of years is slowing you up? Not as young and spry as you used to be? More inclined to the easy chair than to the long hike? And yet on the sunny side of the half century mark! Why, man alive, you’re not old! Stop feeling old. Give a glance at Matt Crosby of Ocate, New Mexico. Matt is rats 91 A ge 5 Been a cowboy since he was knee high to a grassho A and some shucks of a cowboy to this day. i spe Just the other day he roped and tied a three-year-old steer in a little more than four minutes. cpa do you get por vb Maye one asked Matt. ’ outdoors, eating plenty, working plenty, sleepi plenty and lettin’ the other fellow do the worrying.” pi as wi Mather! Watch Child's Tonguel For a Child’s Liver and Bowels Mother! Say “California,” then you will get genuine “California Syrup of Figs.” Full directions for babies and children of all ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue- coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on ing the young man’s fancy does not turn hts of f fi the bottle. Children love this delicious laxative. daylight saving—but hi semploy- RIGHT Her ONG. } woo-oo -- WOW! STAND THIS ANY CONGER SUPPOSED To Uy change of ac Pert him to answer ques personal nature, oF Individual diseases INFORMATION Rorron. Washington. BOR BURDETTE SAID: of w a few Mpression t on @ young mar ron wandere ebureh, station, he ° minister “California Syrup of Figs” moereey en By CONDO SPT ar | [y WisW You's SHow M& ONG of “THOSS GRATES IN _ WHICH You SHIP POULTRY, AND IN STRAIGH T. ' ra keep it up the “_* | he'll find 'S we hope Ste | out wh ears on our hill run only every 20 minutes Hut, old dear, there are at least half a dozen policemen who never have been accused thing Improper. Why ¢ the 400 for the acts of the & “eer Nii \h On weekdays the Rev. George Bt y pay oy cutting thelr hair than saving fe their souls. . Mra C. A. Bile Kyve as her buat oe of Aurora, Ti raising babies taker | ee | Dallas, Texas, in the best Leap | Year city in America, according to the percentage table of marriage | loeonses ianued wince January 1 yard haw jurt that can lift « million pounds | | cee Philadelphia navy 1a giant cre an } | MOVIE OF TWO BROTHERS GO- ING TO SLEEP Move over ! tm my aide now 1 am Ma, Bi Hain't either Git your feet Hain't touehin Ma. Bill's got his feet in my back Oh, what a whopper Gimmie part of the blanket You got Ma, I V's got more'n half the bed ma, off'n me. you it all now 4ill won't if you boys don't shut up and sleep I'll tell father when he comes tn Ho-hum! Zeneeeuzesz' ae oh SUE DOESN'T KNOW WHICH To bo — Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Biue, U. & Public Health Bervtes i have but raintent | I do to Sue won't be out for a y r, Bhe's etill in a wubdeh atate, ‘ier company’s something to fear, *| She's awful to contemplate. Men are a terror to Sue For all the attraction they hold She can't quite decide what to do, To kins them or freeze them cold. in very AT THE NAVY YARD Editor The Star: As I am a con of your paper, I take portunity to ask f le space to air some of th litions in the Puget Sound Navy Yard. stant reader In your columns you have fre quently assailed private employers for their refusal Yo employ men, but you have completely over shipyard, 1, where exwervice ug laid off ight and left, while others, who did not serve during the war, are, kept on the job, During 1917 and 1918 Uncle Sam was begging for men to axsist him fight r Some four call, and exnervice Sam's und Navy Ya are looked “Uncle the Puget Sc men in his " ns of un b his nt many monthe at an enlisted nd endured the hard ntry and over hanged with $60 shift for ourselves. We yest living ns salary and a uniform, t view, ar work De. 1 that is r mplaint, and most of uired of should be « work arged for * who made made scarcely continue to work? when o salaries when we the money more to buy gasoline for thetr thers need 4 into the St automobiles? It surely they were appears that now Uncle Sam is going to aay, “Go now, I don't need you any m We who show ed during the where for a place It certainly won't our patriotian war now to look else © mourn eacher's p earn a living stimulate patriotism among us who proved it when our country was in peril, If we are not wanted in the land we fought for, it would be much better for the government to tell us Iso in plain words, instead of letting | us work a short space of time, and | discharging us, If this is the] democracy we fought for, then we ght in vain, We made the world safe for thowe who stayed at home but for us it looks like “over the hill to the poorhouse.” Must now |look for another country to live in,| |now that America is safe from the Hun? I went to work in the paint shop Jon May 21, 1919, shortly after my re: jturn from © 4. 1 was advanced to a first class painter in three |months, I did all work required of me, and did work that nearly all others refused to do, Y day 1} was discharged, but reinstated to do | the same work at a reduction of 96 cents a day, Others, who have re-| funed to do this work kept their jobs and pay, The best way to lose your | job here is to tell them you are an exaervice man. It is @ fact that nearly all the undesirable work falls 0 as others refuse to do it, and we don't dare, Now, if Uncle Sam | . | won't hire us, who will? then we The civil service commission should furnish | us with pamphiets regarding oppor- tunities in Mexico or some other country, #0 we will not stay here and be in the way. It would also be wise to put a ign over the navy | 1 want to stay | where I \e part of our uni} 0 pay our debts! Ives and fam-/ |In plant life, it means that to get rid of the impuritie On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise A Woman’s Price BY DK. PRANK CHAN (Copyri 20, by Frank ¢ you, ; mission of woman,” and of what she m do in the field of politics, or businesg) art, the biggest business, after all, woman, the most inalienable of her ileges, is to make men be real men, make children be sons of God. Hold up the price! Make him pay! him realize that the road to your love, way to your smiles and kisses, is the hi way of greatne: Do you know this world for? Make him pay! Not money, nor flattery, nor favors, | be cheap counterfeits. They mean nothii or worse, But make him pay in Truth and Ho and Strength and Loyalty and Finen He will pay the price, if you stand out it. Be firm! Drive a hard bargain! You have but one thing to sell. It Yourself. Make him pay—Him Learn these lines of Coventry F tmdres she who may I wish I could say something to women, to make you realize your worth and the high price you ought to set on your- Do you know you are the one thing in this world the man wants most of all? He may give his time and labor and money | for other things, but for you he will give his soul. | You are just that expensive—higher | priced than rubies and diamonds, a deeper necessity than bread, a greater luxury than yachting and limousines, the cause of a more irresistible want than whisky or drugs; in fine, the most valuable commodity in the market of the world. Why cheapen yourself? Why give away a handclasp wantonly | when it might nerve a man to success? Why squander your kiss when it might | be the price of a man’s soul, unleash his feet | from a bad habit, and win him to nobility? | You depreciate yourself. You say you} amount to nothing, and that it makes no | difference what you do, Every woman is a battery of electric purpo or might be. Every woman is a life-preserver that may save some man from going under in the sea of despond. Whatever else you may hear of “the yard gate, Wanted.” self, what you were put It was to make men gi “Oh wasteful woman! On her # ywing he How she has ch for naught 4 the br nt with Had made bru hoowe but pay, ed Paradise! er priceless gift! nd spilled the wine, respective thrift, nd men divine? Ex-Bervice Men Not «ign my nar y may fire me} « present. Anyway, I for it, but I'l goat,” as mat-| starve ntry, ters can't be any Worse than they = TREE TEA xx You can't buy better tea than TREE TEA Ceylon regardless of price. A blend of the choicest mountain grown AN EX-SERVICE born. nee rker and work with t, let them 1 am mar- but that I went to war, can & cha: comm 6a family, here 1am not wanted. My case has many parallels here, ax counties exsoldiers and sailors have been discharged in the past 30 days for po cause at all. | I know of men in my department |who are single, have never seen serv jlee, and in two instances are Fill. pinos, who get the best of work and who refuse the undesirable work we are required to do, and hold their Joba. | The guarantee on TREE TEA Ceylon is the same as on the famous M. J. B. Coffee, both packed by Thin is our thanks for answering our country’s call in her hour of need—and call it democracy Maybe they want to keep us on the move #0 we can't vote next fall Furthermore, the officials here are or three jone all they exeervice men here, but they are powerlens before the civil service comminsion. ney | The complaint is not against the| jcommandant, construction officer or jnuperintendent, but against the sys-| |tem, and some of the petty bosses | here, who never overlook a chance | to make it undesirable for us If you will give this matter a teal publicity, it will go a little way to} p hundreda of us who have been| dincriminated a inst here. You may Now Comes Springtime ij ‘With Its Severe Tax Upon the Human System lindication of “spring f as an unfailing warning # your blood needs a thoro cleansing and toning up. I purities that have been cumulating throughout may have escaped the prevail- ing dangers and come through the winter without having succumbed to illness, _ still your stem has been severe- ly taxed, and all the stored up energy has been consumed winter season should be eli in warding off, disease. jinated, and the system p | Seaeuneeeseeusssseueens |" the best possible condi | | That generaf run- | down condition knownas ‘Spring | Fever’ is now | abroad in the land. to withstand the dangers ¢ summer sickness. j Of course, you do not. like placing yourself under doctor’s care, and there really no necessity for d so. Your system § needs a good toning up, for this purpose there nothing equal to S. S. S., fine old blood purifier tonic that has been in cessful use for more half a century. S. S. S. is nature's remedy, being made roots and herbs of medicinal value, gathered’ rect from the forests. acts directly upon the b promptly cleansing it of 1 impurities, improving the petite, and giving strength and vigor to the tire system. * The buman system is now endeavoring to throw off the accumulated impurities, and §| your rundown condition is a mute appeal to nature for help in preparing for the changing season, Few people are fortunate enough to escape the debili- tating, dragging down con- dition that always comes As springtime approaches with the changing seasons, you begin to notice a loss of and especially when nature is/©"€™SY, you become easily undergoing the transition tired out and fatigued, your from winter into springtime. hebeclada SP £ ‘out, good-for-nothing, run- een wesse down feeling seems to have Just now there is acuniver. & Complete possession of your sal readjustment of every ele @| body. Your poor, tired out ment in nature, Plant and B body has falle victi animal life alike merge into @/) what is pi Lane eg ee the reawakening that comes @| oat is commonly called with the budding of spring: spring fever,” and a feeling them, of complete lassitude per- vades the entire system. janes I eran ; 4, Just as plant life throws Naturally, such a decided) orf the accumulations of the change means a severe tax | winter season, so does the hu- upon the elements involved.)man system find it neces S. 8. S. gives prompt from so-called “spring fever,” and a few bottles taken now will put your system perfect shape for the chang ing season, all the energy stored away that have crept in, and made for winter sustenance has pire ee, aUpIY, Sinagibn and been consumed, and the plant strength and nares taaetes or tree must gather new so badly needed to ‘enter up-| forces to feed and develop it on the new season. eeeeseen ea iting Mg t sighs i and! ‘The most important partof| You can obtain this f ripe romp eaieh Tea ene human system is the|old remedy at any drugsto % ng y heated term. — | blood supply. It is absolute-| Your druggist will l Similarly, the human body ly necessary that the ever-| that it is one of the most has just passed through the flowing stream of life-giving| able remedies on his shelve severest season of the entire fluid be kept pure and rich! For free expert medi year, and has been subject to and that no impurities be per-| vice regarding your own the hardships of the winter | mitted to creep in to make it| you are invited , to ¢ season with all of its various | sluggish and impair your gen-|Chief Medical Adviser, attacks of sickness and dis-|eral health, Swift Laboratorv. ease, And even though you, You should take the first|Ga

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