The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 27, 1920, Page 6

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A Rose by Any Other Name rose by any other name would smell as sweet,” de- the poct. This truth is so obvious that it would} Fdly seem possible any one would s€ek to quarrel with it.) i , ordinary folks would never think of doing ©o.| remained for no less an august body than the senate he state of Washington and no less a distinguished sen-} than the Hon, William Bishop, of Jefferson county, | %o acknowledge it, aye, nigh proclaim it and boast of it} the senatorial housetop. : “A rose by any other name would not smell as sweet, the senator’s chant. As well say an Olympia oyster, by any other name, would fry as well, or that a Jefferson county clam by any name would be as talkative as the senator himself. tt the gentleman from Jefferson county has _ spoken. | tho you may question his olfactory sense, his words not to be entirely wasted upon the desert air. A rose by any other name smells as sweet,” it is true, ‘never forget the human passions, envies, jealousies, | t s, and greed. And when these control, no truth safely escape sacrifice. é it was that the soldier bonus bill met with the op- of Senator Bishop in the 1919 session—and if he is} d as spokesman, his case was not unlike that of other senators, He opposed the measure—not be- soldier bonuses were wrong. So he stated. opposed the measure—not because it would raise} not because the soldiers didn’t ask for it or want irge it. The bonus measure is all right, the senator) d. But he voted against it because Senator Lamping eed it and because The Seattle Star championed it.| THN SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1920. | | WE'LL SAY SO } Greetings! We are delighted to announce that our well known friend, Henry, has returned from the legislature sober and with these remarks When the legistature was de dating the 20:10 plan which would give school teachers $4. 000,000 more Hutchinson argued that for the benefit of the “bar school bey.” Senator Jt marked that he was not what It would do for the foot boy" but wnger 20-10 that open he for ladies would advance in price upon the school ma'm receiving an ease in salary./ Senator Je anid that the relations between the school ma'm 20-10 plan and the barefoot schoo! boy reminded him of the mangwho took“ drink of nearbeer and complained that the man invented must have been a poar dis tance money yearly, I it was was willl then who near-beer judge of eee Senator Rockwell was arguing a bill when he was interrupted EVERETT TRUE Mae GOOD MORNING, Sife. PRETTY COLD OUTSIDE Ttis MORNING} A> i A : BY gieike | AND ITS PRETTY COLD IN HERE, Too, WHEN You RAM XouR ICY MITTS DOWN MY Neck tt Go AND HANG Your FRONT FECT OVER THE RADIATOR ANO THAW THEM OuT Itt PROVING CONCLUSIVELY THAT AL 18 NO KIN TO THE MULE c] ther than give Senator Lamping credit for a worth-| 4 mute over which circumstances | had no control ran away with Misn | effort, the senator from Jefferson county voted to the bonus bill in 1919. Not till the special session of | Olivia Brown this morning D could he recall that unworthy vote. Last Tuesday he FOR the bill. Voted FOR it because it was a good , ind it was NOT called the Lamping bill. | such stuff are cheap politicians moulded. An African missionary reports that natives do not use owija board. In other particulars, however, they no unusual intelligence. The 6-Cent Fare “he ane j fs not at all unlikely that Seattle will soon adopt the! fare. Mayor Caldwell’s election meant that, sooner; ch r Mayor Caldwell himself wanted a higher fare, | impaign methods necessarily put him in the position} he must favor it, or else have the municipal railway the hole.” be in a in many railroad systems, of making no ition if the new maintenance costs sount to 20 per cent or more. his system of was attacked by Mayor Comptroller Carrol] now joins with the new mayor. : I's attack on the municipal railway bookkeeping ans that he must revise it—that he must figure a half| of depreciation, and therefore accept as a “loss”| ‘ h under the other system of bookkeeping would ye the municipal railway'a small profit. Of course, the amount of money actually received by he municipal railway and actually expended is exactly the) me under one sysiem of bookkeeping as the other. ” that Comptroller Carroil seemed to have go shortly after Caldwell’s election is really no dis-, The figures are exactly the same. They were always. The only difference is the method of} since the method of figuring under the new system the railway apparently more and more “in thé hole,” it is plain that the nickel fare will not be maintained | longer. “The day of the six-cent fare is rapidly coming. And should the car pztrons kick? They voted for it. | = ' The employer wha complains of high wag?s should re- | 4 ber that excépt for high wages he would have no excuse for robbing the public. Something Faster | What a shaking up this old globe would get if anyone d discover an agency faster, more powerful than elec- . Interplanetary communication, assuming there is Myone on the other planets with whom to communicate, would be child’s play. : man walks four feet a second; a wind blows 10 feet a} nd; a storm, 52 feet a second; a hurricane, 117 feet a nd; sound, 1,142 feet a second; a rifle-ball about 3,000 a second; light, 192,000 miles a second, and electricity 600 miles a second. ricity outstrips them all. a. If electricity can’t pierce silence between our planet and the next, who'll volunteer) & discover something faster? If Dr. Kapp was really born in New York, it may be t his revolution was merely an effort to get his name the paper. Which Roosevelt? ‘oters who are beseeched to support a presidential can-| ite because he is the “inheritor of the Roosevelt tradi-| ” will do well to examine the grounds upon which this fim is made. | There were two Roosevelts. Each served his country in ageous fashion, according to the light that was given One Roosevelt advocated preparedness, universal military r ng and, when the occasion arose, rode rough-shod| the rights of smaller nations and of minorities. It this Roosevelt who permitted the merger of the pe Coal & Iron Co. with the United States Steel other Roosevelt was a staunch supporter of woman ge, the initiative and referendum, laws to protect w and, in general, all sane and progressive measures on seopapen | non ae ae unite, No one ask which Roosevelt traditi pare ts e] ition Leonard Is that the Roosevelt which the country needs today? _ The politicians don’t really care what Hoover stands A Fihoeed 97 Sender how much he would stand Alger has been frying te thing for severa Kansas City Star. non Podm do the months. x When you have been out smoking, And it makes you sick in bed— And you think that your ma's not joking, When she says your nearty dena, ‘Then you start to worrying, And think your near the end; ru ten that’s When a feller needs a friend. GATHER AROUND, GIRLS ing to rub ft tn. sayips 1 am white, | lam of « southern fam Bo don't go too; should be called at once, and the Lat | health officer notified. ‘The wound Please don't kid yourvelf. her write. I will show you I am FRED CONNISON General Delive ‘ Horlick’s « ORIGINAL Malted Milk \ 2 Re Cooking A Natritious Diet for All Ages Quick Lunch at Home or Office Avoid Imitations and Substits IBERTY | St. Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co. G put and connected. 608 Main 875 “1 Will Not Another Day!” You needn't. A loa debts, free you from better workman. Weekly or monthly Safe. Milk For Infants & lnvalids PIKE ST. the whole blamed world Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Biue, U. & Public Health Beretes DOG BITES Not all dogs bite becaune they are) animal, either dead ar alive, should |rabid (mad), but since rabies is be-|then be turned over to the health | coming mord common, this dread dis | officer for observation and examina cane should always be borne in mind. | tion. | Unpravoked biting should be espe clally regarded with suspicion. Not all persons bitten by @ rabid dog develop rabies, for the clothing ttay wipe off the poison, or prompt cleansing anf cauterization of the wound may prevent Infection. But when rables does develop it is a! . | most invariably fatal. In all cases of suspeced rables, fm an animal or man, a doctor ANSWERED Q 3—What are the causes of ? 2—If parents and were affiicted more susceptible? 3—Is it a germ dinease? thru the blood? &—Can it be better treated by local applications, like ointments, atomix ors, spraym, ete.? pi mhould be allowed to bleed freely, ¢ jand then be cauterised with conc ommend for use in the atomizer? Ad REV. M. A. MATTHEWS Will Preach a Sermon Sunday Morning Entitled HIS SUFFERINGS In the Evening He Will Discuss the Subject OUR HEALING Home-coming Com- munion Service Everyone Cordially Invited FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Seventh and Spring UE Live in Debt an with us will pay your worry, and make you a SECOND AVEN payments arranged. A loan of $100.00 costs you $8.00 interest. Our Requirements: If you are regula: If you are honest, We will lend You do not need to own property. No assignment of wages, no mortgage of property required. Loans Based on Character and Earning Power Industrial Loan & Investment Co Phone Main 4210, rly employed, you. Member 421 Union St. What medicine would you reo | | other On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise AMERICAN LEGION SHRAPNEL SEATTLE, MARCH 27, 1920, VOL. 1. DIRECTORY AMERICAN LEGION Department Headquarters Crary Pulled ©. A. Kiebba, Adjuta Elmer J, Noble Post, No, 1 Meets second and fourth Monday nights, at Veter tate Armory. wale, com : MC, Cutler, ad 707 Soldiers’ and Sailors’ club. Seattle Post, No 18 Meets every Wednesday night, at Veterans’ hail, 1616% Third ave, Frank Reagan, commander; P, Pitegeraia, Rainier Post Moots night, at Veteranw hall, 1616% Third ave, Thon, KR. Parker, commander; I. %. McDonald, adjutant, Lioyd T. Cochrane Post, No, 40 Meets every Tuesday night, at city hall, Ballard Cleorge Hubbard, com mander, TO HONOR DEAD SOLDIER Lioyd T. Cochrane post war pcheduled to hold cer. emonies at ite regular meeting this werk, dent to the hanging of the pieture of Lioyd Cochrane, for whom the post was named. Professor Clark Bissett, of the University of Washington law school, was to make the presenta Uon rpeech, Cochrane, who was a eutenant in the 264th in fantry, was killed in ac tion while advancing with his company in the Ar » the firet a battle, CANADA CALLS LONDON, Mareh 27 — Poingland has granted ea terms to former service men who will migrate to Canada and take up land there. Applications for about 18,000 persons to emigrate have already been recetved. every inet Ko of the spaces connected with these pas 4—Can it be cured by blood tones | see. So long as this inflammation | ointments and the like is of value in| lor ather medicines supposed to act| persists the symptoms of catarrh relieving the symptoms, but often are present. 2—Influence of heredity condition 3—Primarily it 4—The use of medicines auppored Main 2947 is #till undetermined is a germ disease. blood tonics” RISK BUREAU FINALLY GETS OUT OF HOLE au has climbed of its hole at last lays, no more di more put point ta, no Director NR. G, Chotme ley Jones sighed with re lief as he announced this caught up with its work and from now on exserv loo men are assured prompt action on their letters or complaints news in With real, personal let tern, too! No more stereo typed form letters that half the time did not cover the subject at hand. And red tape will be cut more than ever, The bureau is going to become more hu man. Unposted premiums wore 88,000 Now they ar --less than @ day's work Bo that @ receipt for a premium will be returned in @ few days, Unanswer- ed mail in the insurance division shows a reduction of about 60 per from the daily balance of five months ago. In two o three weeks the bures believes 't will be able to answer all the mail as quickly as it is now pow sible to mail out premium reeefyta Some idea of the enor mity of the bureau's job may be gained from the et that the total number applications for insur Ance was 4,610,388, total ing cent More than pl ons for the conver sion of war risk 5 into permanent forms have already been e4. About half ash year endowmen’ than one-fourth payment life. for 20- Perhaps. Sir Oliver Ledge can help resurrect No more de 4 LEGION BALL APRIL SIXTH ‘The first a of Amer No, 18 » 1 dance n pont be held Tu g. April 6, First 4 Sergt am Fitzger: sign W. True ring the deal ner for the en at ing introducing all men who are to the activ pomt will be ar future at y hall. every purpose ex not member of. the in the ne nervice post meets Wednesday night. WOMEN, HAIL! Fivery veteran who, dur ing his army life, got any kind of aid or comfort from a Red Cross, Y, or Salvation Army Mesto will hall the final ratification of the woman suffrage amendment as the only and best way to recognize her accomplishments and © her work. t exbuck who haa Sa mesie's wistful with his doughnut of the Lnes, or dexwert was a ant “Want another helping?” from the gay, gingham-gowned girlie in the Paris canteen—what ex-buck, after this, would deny woman equality with himself? Equality? Why, tf he could, many a soldier with fond memories of war's pleasant angle, would raise woman even above himself, above the level of masculine combat and competition, to the height of faith and hope and charity. KEEP THAT CARD The War Risk Bureau has been sending identifi cation cards to men hold- ing government insurance, - but many recipients have returned the cards. The Girector of the bureau wants it known that these cards are to be kept for identification purposes tn case of sick ness or accident. NOBLE POST GIVES DANCE ‘The first of a series of informal summer dances by Blmer J, No Pickering, Vlimabeth Conley and Mise laura Whortf, HE SPEAKS FOR WASHINGTON Livingstone FE Wilke fon, commander of Rhodes post, No. 2, of Ta . . in representing Washington's 62,000 ex- vervice men on the nation- al bonus question, to be decided at a special exeo utive ameeting of the Ameri@an Legion, held in Washington, D. C, this week, CATCHING UP The War Risk Bureag reports it has caught ap with the work thrust upon it when demobilization set in. It is getting less than a day's work, mid the di- rector. ‘Therefore we should ex- pect a reduction of the huge force employed by the bureau. The large number of clerks have helped the government of- fices catch up with their work, but they still seem to stick, altho the work is slowing down. How can private indus thy catch up with all these surplus clerks lounging about the capital? Indus try has been waiting for the government to catch Now it is for the govw- | ernment to free all the clerks possible, so that in dustry might get @ chance to catch up. grandparents | varied. In most tnstances there is| efit, but in the majority of instances | have him would i render me|4 chronic inflammation of the namal| local treatment, often by operative the trouble tf possible, parenges and of the hollow bony | meana, is indicated. | to the proper &—The local application of sprays, quite without influence on the un- in this | derlying cause. to act | atomizer, $—Under the circumstances it is unwise to recommend any particu and ilar loca! application for use in an You should rather con The causes of “catarrh” are'thru the blood, is sometimgps of ben | sult some nose and throat specialist, INFORMATION EDITOR, U.S. Pablle Health Main 1947 CHERRY STREET mevnniiniiit we —— St 5 LIBERTY BONDS Where do you keep the Liberty Bonds which you bought with your savings during the World War? If you are a depositor of the Scandinavian American Bank they should be in our vault. N AS We have made special provision for the handling of these bonds in our Bond De- partment, where a receipt is given for them, and where they may be had at any time. They are deliverable to the depositor only, so if the receipt is stolen it is of no value to the thief. ALASKA BLDG Our Home Federal Reserve “SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN BANK Bank SEATTLE In _ addition these bonds in to keeping a safe place for you, we also collect the interest coupons and deposit become due, as they the money in your account. We shall be pleased to have all of our depositors take advantage of this service, which is done free of charge. you know, These are just the bonds, same as money if you lose them. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Open Saturday Evenings From 6 to 8 o'clock Use our Branch i at Ballard if more convenient N ' Bra oil wat Ballard sss 4 \ Re

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