The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 31, 1920, Page 6

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The Seattle Star out of ofty, He per month: # momtha Pe ta tee year, bbee in. the te ef Washington Outstds the stat Per month, $4.50 for ¢ months or $9 year, lly carrier, city, 18¢ por week. The Crime and Its Penalty WE'LL SAY SO { We arise to anak, wil! y ever make the ocean dry? You noticed It, but we reprint | Greetingy the probably The effect is local. For a are shocked, maybe suffer. | prebs ; are individual and rapidly ‘ pi Ardent a of pax Joe Doe kills Richard Roe. time, the men’s friends Os f . er consequences of the murder | n Mused, and the community's affairs go on "He who, buys his way into the United States pense, OF Danae y ntative government body, strikes at the A. anh tee FO athe t He shows millions of people that) tnis afternoon. She had 1,088 pas of the whole nation. es : hat they want eso grad ay Bnd Semie franchise is powerless to give them what the red ard that they are being governed without their consent ; Laer ds the monied who hold the power; that the po ie mtative government is & rank fraud. It . a vic ss “ blow at republicanism, a deliberate subverstor i we Eerill of re ch the hands | ®t. alas: « will of republicans. It is putting a torch in the ha rare! Mt i ssassins f dhe American consti-| treyre'nirtiny the Jape here tnetoad. hy. It is assassination of @he 4 sone, comets «Sey sas and has all the meanness of “ruthless” subr ~ llega HEL GET RS |fares I will walk some more. “a pa B.C, March 29 probably the largest orn ever brought by a rient, the P, CG. R er in the saloc i writes Dre ¢ ru the streets of your Lom no wo nd bread > aingr 2 on car i of Michigan, gets a sentence of the latter only a mere r Seattle barbers are talking about rre: ame of politics. | $1 batrcuts is our wife Yer great ort Be pt ‘an |YOU Kueaed right. She's going t ne . keep the $1 in the family Sena ject Newberry, 0 9 prison and $10,000 fine, for a man of his wealth, os be a e is the limit, under the . here isnt Sy anarchist, Bolshevik or bloody “Red ayers “oe the country but regards the Newberry case wi h glee.| lat” they are saying. “The your repre: entative or ment. She is bought, by those who have money enc ug ‘ harlot! And when they’re actually caught at pak My fa sentence that's nothing compared to w hat we got for} saying that she’s theirs for her pric nd it will be some time before New berry his cell, if ever. Here's a enry, the Q Why wom A. So they will to think about wh . cruel stab penned by nfirmed bachelor n knit? ve something they're talking . Stir Oliver Ladge has begun to tel! the New York folk all about the hereafter There te something |atrange the way some give out tf formation the hereafter when ; | man has not eve ed the past oi of justice says living wouldn't be 80 | present. x hcl eeaed, 5 1 buy cheaper things. It must grieve od this gem of wisdom. sees the inside The department h if people woule Ba think that he overloo Turkey's minister of war has re migned. Oh, well, the war's over. ‘a 7 ee m ||_ However, John F. Angood ts pas Good Reading || tor of the M. E. church in Tionesta, Pa And Helen Hotter ts business sec to| retary of the ¥. W. C. A. in Topeka. And Vesper Bell isa ¥. W.C. A auditor tn Chicaga eee ANSWERED garden seed catalogue is like a book of poetry ogy reads it by the evening light in March. He reads the names of herbs for a vegetable garden— and sweet marjoram, savory, taragon and fennel. here’s poetry of a sort even in names of varieties of| ir mn Flat Dutch, Jersey Wakefield, Danish Round |; aw he would | Pong tal fl. doubt he would first draw a/ f peas to be picked with the dew) ‘volver ge repay a It recites a list of table| broccoli, chives, The them, fresh. for the table. rs almost unknown to the restaurant— ek. What do you thing that stopped EVERETT TRUE THE Books AND MAGAZINES IN “THIS LIBRAR' ARS SYPPOSED “To THAT'S WHAT THEY'RE GoING to IF You CAN'T GOT ALONG witHouT A A Book- REST, BRING SYGAR Bowe ALCON DQ WITH Xou ty On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Morality of Travel BY DR. FRANK CRANE Mothers dread for their children to go out} into the world. Travel is supposed to be | ‘oosening to morals. Staying at home and | walking the daily treadmill has a reputation | of being the best way to stay good. | As a matter of fact, the only real good | thing in the world is humanity; all of it. | Goodness is a quality that inheres in the general mass. When you fence off a section of folks and fancy you are going to raise the moral tone, you are mistaken. By and by somebody always has to break down the fence and rescue the elect to keep them from cutting one another’s throat. One reason, perhaps the why the medieval main reason, | world was so bloody and harsh was that it was utterly provincial. | They had in those days few means of travel. Each community lived to itself, had its own | customs, costumes, and cussedness. Hence, | first, they were dirty. They were brutal. | Their only outlet for enthusiasm was war, which was carried on as a steady business, | which the king or duke was general | manager. They drove the sick and insane out into the woods. The sport of the on CIRCULATS, AND Do A BRICK or bility was to ravage among the common people. They tortured witnesses in court and roasted heretics before the church door. They were naturally visited with terrible pests. Cholera, red death, and black death raged. People died like flies. They were ignorant. They were super- | stitious. They not only did not know the | things that are true, but they knew an ocean of things that are not true. | What has cured all this has been, largely, | travel. Giving the Reformation, the Rennais- | sance, and the rise of Science full credit | » for their share in the work of bettering — the race, still the principal causes were > Steam and Printing. é Railroads have done more to break down not only the physical but the moral bare riers between men than any other single agency. World-wide commerce is a surer guaranty of world-wide disarmament than all the peace conferences and pacts. It is” the ocean liner that has rendered impossible and flooded Europe with can ideas. Add to this the printing press, whieh brings libraries and newspapers and thoughts of all past ages and of all far countries home to the smallest hamlet. This unifying of all humankind softens, refines, elevates each part. There ig, no salvation for any one individual nor for any one nation. The only possible salvation is for the whole world. Whoever made this human race intended to make any sort of dog-in-the-manger cul- ture, religion or health impossible. Steamboats and locomotives are the shut- tles weaving the ethics of the future that shall depend on no church, no class, nor sect, nor any segment of humanity, but upon the wide, universal instincts and emo tions and thoughts of all. i Missionaries going to China and Chinese students coming to American schools are building wiser than they know. The steam and roar and rattle, the many cargoes on the seven seas, the seream racing express trains, the snowstorms of paper from the unwearied presses—all are busy at the gigantic moral and enterprise of getting humanity together. rea? Are charcoal tablets benef. Bome forme finite infection rina are due to gout Hed rheumatiom are nothing more t the effects of of care. og| Q Can you give me the name ot | to & laree number of 4t mnt conditions, | your interest and hold ft ike @ the muscles and| Dr. Stokes kindly furnished the beumatian repre: | Iealth service with « number of these of the joint; | books to be distrituted to = i Some cases ber of people. » | Informatio Some of the Service, Washington, D. G, @ y of them can be| this book will be mailed to you, ppropriate treat- | free, oe, even with the} “UNCLE SAM, M.D” tol it and @ physician should be con-|a good book on “social dineases” e il, cardoon, shallot. " There’s news in the catalogue, too. A few years ago the| was of a new and more savory swee Bantam.” 5; ‘ ; another grower has produced a variety which has color and flavor of “Golden Bantam” with the greater of “Country Gentleman.” ; crossed the small, yellow variety with the larger white, sted the few yellow grains from the large ears grown first year, planted these, and kept up this } \* »rocess of} What golden. | . House Ro! Why not call It the Pancake? Why te Mt that an alevator ma: suse he ference between © woman Ut cake and @ police t corn called} we nave suet on Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. 8. Public Health Bervies FINDING THE CAUSE OF LOWERED PRODUCTIVITY Tere are a few plain, tho none the where the employes could be treated. lens startling, facts which should be, It took only a abort carefully studied by every employer! while to write off the cost of oper of labor who wishes to improve ef-| ating the clinics by Can raise hirmeectt. paratively increased produc ltriend about rheumatism. that covers the question thoroly? eo } I had an argument with a| ei Kindly en- lighten me as to its cause, also can it be cured? A. The word “ ction until] now the ears are all large and all ‘one who did that is a city man, Dr. Frederick DeLue. ‘an oculist, of Boston, Mass. : ; ' “So there is adventure as well as poetry written in the) den seed catalog. | | | woman uses a hammer and a ub to crack the Questions We Cannot Answer What weather If a tt her un Prevent the Ivy Jane F. Will & spring lock work tn the! winter thme?—H. B. HL j Can you tell me why ft ts we hear | h of maonehiners when thetr| . on I know what makes the milk turn but please toll me what makes the apple turnover?—Hans Jergenson. irror ts on al al break in the South. larding sees signs of a politic - 7 “ s signs that the world That's nothing. A London man see | ig coming to an end this year. Who’s Who in Coal ‘ President Wilson washes his hands of coal price control. Under the recommendation of Mr. Wilson’s commission 27 per cent increase in wages, estimated at 200 million) ws the year, “will be absorbed by the increased prices consumers will have to pay after April Ist.” | Buck! buck! Who's got the buck? The same old goat. keeps stepping on will it] from having ears? les corn orn every day 0 ee Te one ta no tit! Household Hints G. FP. WL submits them Water may be bolled tn an enamel saucepan without scorching if first | allowed to simmer until {t persptres | freely. } A pint of milk may be Increased to two quarts by adding three pints of water. If you feel yourself slipping on a banana akin on the sidewalk, sprinkle mand on it. A sure way to prevent eake from burning ts to bake ft In a cold oven. | A coathanger will not squeak if étiad deendbonaior | There is a general understanding that if little Mary remains a grass-widow.it will be her own fault. |Up to Woodrow Wilson ficlency, reduce production costs and put the plant on @ basis where it wil pay dividends on the investment The information ts furnished by a corporation that among its ether ac tivities built @ city in a wilderness for the housing of thousands of men and women employes, subsequently when efficiency of these workers dropped below what might be expect- ed, this concern sent experts to con duct rvey and find the cause, It developed: at one employe tn every 10 had & Yenereal disease. That 68 per cent fect were on the lint because of venereal dinrases. That every person who had a ve Reveal dinease as many hours from work as the person not affected. That it cowt every person #o af. fected $75 par year for treatment; a total of $50,000 for treatment wit jons of time greatly exceeding thin amount, It was reasonably established that in plant surveyed © typical of conditions in other It ner the pone of con would be the of the nonef. non-«ffective wt three times nditions the ing the officials that worth the cont to remedy ation The United States Public service was appealed to and erated tn Health co-op. omtablinhing free clinics on. Q Is lodide of soda a good rem edy for a goiter? taken; in what amounts and when? | A. lodide of soda ie vneful How should it be ” - —~ J ANSWERED } * = } | Washington's Leading Dentist tn some | neane te en | eration? » lands are dne to th f tubercia ba these bact fiande thro the ¢ hywictan should decide Dr. Blokes of the celebrated Mayo tten = book for the t ited | eorvice, form of treatment to employ. Q° Does eating before retiring tn jure a person? Some eay it does but it has never had any effect on me. it from just « Q. What acute tnd are the BY R. F. PAINE Woodrow Wilson has another opportunity to do a t thing as leader of the American people, in be- of the American people, and thereby make a glorious, pathetic close to his career as president. It is to remove the league of nations covenant as an issue in the national campaign, and thus enable the people to intelligently and decisively pass upon pressing domestic issues. There is still time for him to present a treaty with the nations with which America made war that would be speedily ratified by the senate. He is stone blind if he cannot now see that such is American sen- timent that neither this senate nor the senate to come will ratify any treaty without reservations fully protecting America as a free nation, especially free as to the matter of using her mothers’ sons in the business of war. He must realize that a terrible crisis will face this country if the covenant is the all-absorbing issue in the coming national campaign. The people are confronted by an era of decidedly higher prices of necessaries, not lower. The losses of national income, thru the supreme court’s release of stock dividends from income taxation, must be made good by the consumers. Revision of tariffs upward means new burdens on the American con- sumers. The guarantee to the railroads means higher cost of transportation, which the consumezs must pay. All this promotes dangerous radicalism and universal bitterness. And when upon this bitterness we pile hyphenate hate, stirred up by the demagogy of politics, we are bound to have a psychological status that is most deplorable and threatening. What shreds of comity of international sentiment will remain, if the present tide of anglophobia, for instance, is swelled to the flood of red hot polities? No matter what the re- sults of a campaign with that covenant as the issue, the chief result is certain to be a great weakening of our capacity to perform our part, cheerfully, sin- cerely and honestly in any international covenant. We bid fair to cover ourselves with mud, hefore the eyes of the world; to continue as a disorderly house indefinitely; to press the consumer's nose still harder upon the grindstone; to take the rule of the or to take revolution, of what sort the only may know. President Wilson can lead the way out, if he will. New York-—Dr. Smith, a well known eye spectaiist, and Dr. Jud kins, a Massachusetts physician an medical author, make the following reports after « thorough test of a| popular remedy for the ayes: | Says Dr. Smith: “When my at-| Inclined te be skeptical But it ta rule of mine to «ive every new treatment @ chance to prove its value. Having specialized in eye work for many years, fied to express an {i this one has created tion, I welcomed the opportunity to tent’ it. began to use it in my ago, and e of the accomplished with Bon-Opto not only astonish myself, but also oth physicians with whom I have talked about it, and I adviae every thoughtful physician to give! Bon-Opto the me careful trial I have, and there is no doubt in my mind that he will eome to the con clusion L have, that it opens the door for the cure of many eye trou bie hich have heretofore n difficult to cops with, I have had individuals who had ‘worn glasses | for yours tell me they have dis-| pensed with them through the use of | Bon-Opte. In my own practice I have seen it strengthen the eyesight more than 60 per cent in one week's T have also used it with sur atarrhal conjunctivitis, smart painful, aching, itching eyes weakened from colda, sun, dust and wind, blurred vision, and, lother conditions too numerons mention in this report, A new and striking case that has just been brought to my attention ts that of a |wirl 12 years old, Two prominent eye specialints, after a thorough ex- jantion, decided, according to her her, that in or to save the of her right eye, the left must removed. While awaiting an op- portunity for the operation, and atill undecided as to its wisdom, her | father wes told it would do no harm to une m-Opto., In leas than three day®@ a it! Eye Specialist and Medical Author Report on Wonderful Remedy To Strengthen Eyesight was noticed. At the end of a week the inflammation had almost disap- peared, and at the end of «ix wi the eye was pronounced aaved. think what the aaving of that eye means to this Httle girl! Another case is that of a indy $2 years old. tention waa first called to it, 1 waa/ She came to me with dull vision and|my ewn name extreme inflammation of the lida, and the conjunetiy After two Z the lide we: her eyea girl of 16. Dr. Judkina, Mansachusetts physt clan and medical auth chief of clinics If the t Honpital, Boston, M. 4 house surgeon at the New kung nd to prescribe «la ing the simple f the basin of n, in my opinion, is a remarkable remedy for the cure and prevention of many eye Ginorders. Its success in developin 4 strengthening the eyesight will old fashioned Opto as ¢ as that ¢ th brush. I am thoroughly convinced from my ex- perience with Bon-Opto that it will strengthen the eyesight at least 60 per cent in one week's time in many Instances.” Victims of ey ntrain and other eye weaknesses, and many who wear will be glad to know that, Dre real hor ¥ they have had their eyes r by this remarkable remedy, many who ones wore glass say they have Inid them aside. © man ways after using it “I was almost blind. seo to read at all. N everything without at my eyen do not hurt night they would pain dreadfully Now they feel fine all the time. was like @ miracle to me.” A Indy who used it gaye: | "The atmoxphere eemed hazy with or without glasses, but after using this prescription for 16 days, everything seems clear, 1 cam read even print without Co! w I can re: 1 It] Says It Strengthens Eyesight 50% in One Week's: Time in Many Instances |g laasen™ Another who used It says was bothered with eye strain, by overworked, tired b indosed ft) have worn 1 | both for dis and without the on an envele |typewriting on the im can do by ng-distance ginases 1 can count the flutter on Une trees across the which for several years like a dim green biur to not express ny t what Jt hae done forme 7” * It t# believed that thousands who ard them ititudes * to be apared the trouble nae of ever getting glasses ye troubles of many descriptions may be wonderfully benefited in tt easy manner |and get « Dissolve one ta’ glans of water, and use from two to | four times a day. You should notice | your eyes clear up perceptibly right from the start, and inflammation and redness will quickly disappear. If your eyes bother you, even a little, it is your duty to take steps to save them now, before it tn t late. Many hopelessly blind mig have aved their might if they ha cared in time. NOTH Another prominent physician te whom the above article was submitted aid “Yee, Opto proscription ts uly a w ey atituent 1 seribed by them. I have used it vo muccesatully in my own practicn on tlents whose eyon were strained thre | overwork oF minfit glansen jd not|the very few pre on hand for regular use in Kon-Opto, referred ® patent medicine or a Tt in an ethical prepare tion, r pankaga, ft to mtrengthen one week's time in man refund the money, It is dispensed under mweranty by ell good druggists in this ity, «ymptoma of on and how can it be The Demand of the Day Is Sanitation ‘There are reasons for this, and that is I benefit the people. I give them resulta It is good business to do so, and while I may be accused of everything under the sun, TI am still paying attention to my own busi ness, dnd I appreciate every patient's ef forts to send me new patients by giving them careful attention. Now about prices. By doing volume of business I can give a very reasonable price. That is the benefit of a large organization, and I am giving these actual benefits to the people of this city. Volume of business permits of @ large buying power in material, and I get every discount, I know what it costs to give the best den- tistry and add a small profit, and am giving Seattle people these benefits in my prices, My prices are not based upon competition, but based upon business principles. Firet of all, to do good dentistry the den- tist must have good equipment. I have the best. You and I would naturally like to have everything. clean and sanitary, and my office is the last word In sanitation I am exclusive user of the best material. It would be foolish to invest over $70,000 dentistry in this state unless I got re and to get returns I have to five re It is hardly conceivable to believe war to invest thousands of ind not give Seattle peo- in turns that I goin dollars in Senttle ple good dentistry It would be poor business and would not warrant such an expenditure, My grows month by month, cause each patient who comes to me ts gi the best of material and the finest of work- manship based upon my experience, which has no equal in the Northwest. THE BEST CROWNS. . ‘orcelain or Gold and made as well as all men of reputation make them, BEST BRIDGEWORK.............$5.00 My methods are based upon the experience of the best men practicing today and I guar antes satisfaction, RUBBER PLATE os es - $10.00 A guaranteed fit and any colored rubber you want. A plate made in this city’s finest laboratory, correct in shade of teeth and size and shape. My facilities to give you what you want are the best in this city, Obey That Ever-Insistent Impulse and Visit Dr. Wilson Today DR. J. T. WILSON Opp. Colman Bldg. Phone Elliott 1833 Lady Attendants business THE Ssesaseeas @ a a ee es cts ses 8 eee eeeaeoeeaepeaempeoesae as

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