The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 2, 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)

She Seattle Star r month; f months Ry mail, out of city, Se pe: ithe, $2.80; ¢ mon year, $5.00, in the tate of Wash tho atate, The per month, $4.50 for ¢ my a, oF 88.0 ie per week. per year, By carrier, city, A Blow at Americanism has suffered for many years. Americanism—vrepresentative government reason than that they were affiliated with that party. These socialists were regularly elected. Nomies or government. \ them, they are entitled to public office. ism; that is democrac licanis: — party ticket? Int cate the abolition of slav ally in the light of later events. as ashamed of the action against the socialists yesterday. The aliens are going home because this country is dry. In this exodus may be a suggestion for the solution of Gov. Edwards’ troubles. Palmer Quakes * gays the intrepid Palmer, ‘was sweeping over ev Derning up the foundations of society" ‘slay the terrible monster! his and now the awful thing is no more. ket was it, according to Palmer’s own statement? wag doing all these terri and the American home, the and ‘workmen the American government. the hysteria against the “reds,” in this band of deluded extremists. of “revolutionists.” when to quake. Know The kaiser wasn’t damned, in spite of universal wish- — perhaps being Doorned will be just as satisfac- Mating Time has been accentuated by the war. ion is the choice these women have. z put up at auction as brides for the settlers. g lei 2 5 g » i} 8 F ie inderlying reason. @ the Salvation Army is proud of its job. offer no apology for active propaganda designed of the army engaged in this work. more men than women.” own nature as it is to the welfare of the race. On Calvary According to Saint Luke And when they came to the place, which is called Calvary, where they crucified Him, and the malefactors, one on the right hand, and the other on the left, Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do. And they parted His raiment, and cast lots. And the people stood beholding. And the rulers also with them derided Him, saying, He saves others; let Him save himself, if He be Christ, the chosen of God. And the soldiers also mocked Him, coming to Him, and ofter- ing Him vinegar. eee And it was about the sixth hour, and there was a darkness over all the earth until the ninth hour, And the sun was darkened, and the veil of the temple was rent in the midst. And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, He raid, Father, into thy hands I commend My spirit: and having said thus, “He wave up the ghost. Now when the centurion saw what was done, he glorified God, saying, Certainly this wan a righteous man eee And that day wag the preparation, and the Sabbath drew on. And the women also, which came with Him from Galilee, reg after, and beheld the sepulchre, and how His body was Speaker Sweet and the New York legislature yesterds striick the severest blow at American democracy this nation | (+ They struck at the heart of | when they voted to expel five members of the socialist party for no other There was no} ** ion of fraud. There was no question of their buying eir seats, such as was charged in the election of Senator Newberry. They were the choice of their constituencies, the] Tepresentatives of the people in their districts. If our Ame jean government means anything, it means that the ballot} controls; that the voice of the people is the law; that the consent of the governed is the necessary qualification for | One need not agree with the socialists’ theories of ecc But if enough voters agree with That is American- ; representative government; repub- m. If this were not so what is to prevent a republican con- gress from ousting all democrats, or vice versa? What is to t a reactionary legislature from ousting all progress- What is to prevent a narrow-minded, partisan con- from expelling Herbert Hoover, for instance, from} the presidency if he should happen to be elected on a third he city of Boston a man was dragged thru the streets in pre-civil war days, and lynched, because he dared to advo- —a disgrace in any event and e day New York and the rest of the U. S. will be just Attorney General Palmer has summed up in a recent issue of The Forum magazine what he calls “The Case Against the Reds.” “the blaze of revolution American institution of law and order a year aga | | It was cating its way into the homes of the American workmen, its sharp | tongues of revolutionary heat were licking the altara of the churches, crawling into the sacred corne marriage vows with libertine laws Bat St. Geo: Palmer was at hand, thank heaven, to) oy He discovered its lair, launched was 55,000 deluded men and women composing the com- Munist and anarchist groups in America. That is Ps'mer’s estimate of the total number of communists in the United ghee! he takes that from the claims of the communist - party if. This terrible menace of rattle-brained radicals| enthusiasts, comprising one-half of one per cent of our ble things to American| American churches and schools, and the American marriage laws and} It’s true that nobody but Palmer and a few other poli- anxious for campaign issues and hoping to capitalize saw much of a nienace Most everybody be- lieves in America and her institutions and has so far refused to tremble at the wordy manifestos of this infinitesimal But an attorney general should | ; One and a quarter million women in the British Isles is a great excess of women over men in Britain. Spinsterhood or) A great many | Bren tho at whites he bi are choosing emigration. They are not going— women in the early days of American colonization They going—like the Japanese picture brides of today— udy their husbands. Not many of them scious reason that they want hus- It is the funda- nating that will take these women over- procure a better distribution of the sexes,” says the com- eee of i Po Alea , “One of the r-the-war assigned the Salvation Army op oes is to stimulate emigration of women and direct it to those colonies in the British empire where there are For the exceptional woman, a career may take the place of wifehood and motherhood; for the great iiajority of women, thanks to the primal urge of evolutionary ten- dencies, to want and seek a mate is as necessary to her THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1920. -EnITORIALS | WE'LL SAY SO : 1p iY ETT TRUE Creetin After Ay we can still find mufficiegt amuse ment in t headline, "Man Must Hang Murdering Quartet,” to remark that if the au any ne lke the one we hear singin y night in the house acer street the murd ought be given a medal, which © ocktie . enduring than . . fe ha it barbers ¢ of haircuta to $1 ® going to band housewives t Our w been eating meat ra the Y the ne r in a club to cut their hue dw’ hair, Shall we not call | ne Barberiam club? Now that the barbers are talking of raising, and potatoes have gone to five for a quarter, we hear the dairymen have hopped up the rhe of milk. First time we knew cows lived on potatoes and had their hair trimmed. Not a very bully Joke, what? eee Jewelers predict that potato neck laces «will = soor be the fashion We don't and foreace the time when pe supplant the rency © peeltnes will | fashioned — cur . . Strawberries have dropped cents a quart. This will go down | history aa cheap strawberry week cee An Amsterdam cable says the ex kaiser has cut down his 16,000th | tree. Deducting Sundays, holidays }and days on which Bill was under « physician’ care, there have been lems than 400 days that he could have mpent in cutting down trees, ro )| that to make this record he has had || to fell 40 trees a day, Working 10 hours a day, he had to cut down a tree every 15 minutes, We'll say Mit) is some chopper, What do you su; pone was the diameter of the treen? | And they grew pretty clone to the| erounds to which Bill is restricted, | didn’t they? | . Thousands of discharged house | maida in Denmark are talking of | coming to the United States to es ape H.C. Lb. Smart lot of . | What's H.C. L. in the U. to a housemald . re ee Died A. D. 1919 Sign on a distillery in Lexington. Ky., according to the report of a re turned trav GREEN RI It ER. DORN WITH THE home and business, a change REPUBLIC py nen “Eyes a cee jot climate and environment, ts & very necessary mental and physica) tonic for the hardworking American. | But where to go and what to do |is a problem. Wundreds and hun | drede of peopie every year take bag @nt baggage and go away to rest up and recuperate. They return some times broken in health and spirit ‘because the place they selected was inmanitary, beeet with flies and mos quitoes and the drinking water pol luted. Of they go off into the wtids, Ignorant of camp sanitation and firnt ald treatment and fare equally as bad. But. as the dressmaker remarked, | “I seldom lowe my temper, but when I do I'm a tearer.” Rosebuds in the Wheat BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE 1 heard Ged from his Judgment-coat Speak ante Death, “It is not meet; Masebeds are in the ripened wheat. To guard againet this, the ™ fonith “Canst thea not count thy sickle’s gain And cat the ripened, in, golden Beryl Letting the revebads still remain? © has published a tafe Vacation,” “Rarely it sheweth wanten power To searity the morning flower | Bre it hath blossomed its little howr. “And all the earth ie filled with grief And men deny me their belief; | Rosebuds are in the garnered sheaf.” Thee anewered Death, “Oh, I am eld; My eyes are dim, my bleed is cold; The sickle wavers in my hold. | te it my taalt the resehade grow Hard by the wheat field's enter row, Or that my hand le palsied eo? | “Give Love my sickle Let him serve; Ne tender stroke of bis will swerve And they shall die who shall deserve.” a companion wher jever it might be necessary to render first ald to the Injured. It points the way to a vacation that will be |bealthful and sets down a number | of rules of sanitation to be borne in mind. | The booklet also contains a brief, |but necessary, chapter on first aid. Tt Mast and explains rescue Jand resuscitation of the drowning | treatment ‘of wounds and hurts, snake bite, sunburn and pot non tvy. In additian it sete down minor | | Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. &. Public Health Berets | VACATION DAYS A healthfal vacation, to get awaysome rules for bathing, which, if ob | Look, EveRcTT, DIDN'T TL Tecce BAYOU IT WOULD % R's WRITING us narrow, drawbacks. — ( || As the poet says, narrowness, { aroundness, a screwdriver; a jor a violin, Ie NOU LOOKX cvcose, BOY, Youuc S&B& Some | SPUN TERS FROM A WEEJEE intolerant and ha | jtense that Editor The Star forum at yes, of wisdom, surety! acclaim frorr hund: wisdom? a purpose those hupdred milli: were #uc purpore welfare of a hundred Surely, selected them for served, would make drowning re-| TAG" to ar tome mote. pe re 39g JROMINENT importers and No mention of resorts is made Bg! ro Bacon goo Mgr pa wholesale dealers in crude pail gs ancy nag soe | pre [have vouchsafed these men? More! drugs and medicinal herbs ded. the rescet Htoelt is senitary, |Vouehaafed the honor of placing | gathered from all parts of the The book simply tells one how to avoid the things that make the va cation dangerous to the health Write the U. 8 Public Health happiness to us! k.” Harvard University, vac. |Priationa, mayhap, ©, of Philadelphia, vaccinated |men work, hia oldest child about the same time, |% «reat cx and then tested the experiment by |may be, th tr smallpox teotive power of vaccination America was strengthened material | tions with lees ly by this bold act. President Jeg. | time. ferson was instrumental ho introduc. | “~~ ing vaccination in the southern | United States. ot diseases Address | Some women ar it gives |heat, but just burns, their = FEATunes It is good to be in earnest. - | SOMETHING |! ger of intensity is that it is likely to make | h sows nd he ef teful. Our capital, a} which #it men of wisdom— Were they not selected by popular | cussing, And men of strong integrity and Did they not assure and reassure ma that t that they had but one one desire—to promote the million? the hundred million have wisdom! Surely, they are men of rong in- these men in this forum that they may bring all honor and glory and Let us pause a moment in this Let us witness for the comple cinated his own children, and John |tion of the railroad that i to «ive 4 carry the produce of markets, © discussing meas- exposing bir to the influence of | ures that will make our great terri. ‘The reliance on the pro |tory’s governmental machinery work tn |More amoothly—discharge ite func: lons of invaluable In short, they are perfecting nh wit Impossible for him to answer ques- tans of @ purely personal nat to preseribe fur individual disuars, either in column or by mail, INFORMATION EDITOR, questions of general isterest relating U. & Public Henlth Servies, only to hygiene, and the Washi “Nay, none!” cried Leve, for I would The milk breath and the sitver hair "| And all between, the foul or fair.” Then whispers! God henea! “The sickle must remain “Fee whe would know that life | jeot. } If life shonid never know defeat, | with rosebuds in the wheat!” | to DK. J. nN. MINYON Free Examination BEST $2.50 GLASSES| s-+s- 0, on Earth shanna We are one of the few optical! | atores in the North it that really | grind lenses from t to Bnish, and we are the only in SEATTLE—-ON FIRST AVE, Examination free, by graduate op. | tome’ Gia: op neribed a BINYON OPTICAL CO.| 1116 wig roa be P.C.B PRODUCTS im 1650 nnie Laurie Short Freed IBERTY MARKET Pike and Liberty Theatre Don’t ask for Crackers—say SNOW FLAKES Fresh from the Oven Crisp, light, daintily delicious crackers—salted just enough— in other words—SNOW FLAKES! PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT CO. The Disease of Intensity BY DK. rh (Copyright, 1926, But the dan- Everything in this mundane sphere has ave lumpy jaw, k eye, hogs cholera, men appendi- 4, every organism has its peculiar disease 0 bite ‘em, as aforesaid, intensity often runs Whoever knows all about something | ;| rarely knows much of anything else, Ex- | pertness is bought at the price of all- | I know a man who understands every- | thing about automobiles, and can fix any gas engine in creation with a pair of nippers and couldn't tell you whether Boticelli is the name of a cheese virtuous, in the com- jmonly accepted meaning of the term, that there is but One Virtue, that they are petty, mean, and unbearable in all other ways. So there are men’ so temperate they are | offensive, and so honest they are indecent. | There is a diseased patriotism, which in \its single aim to be loyal, becomes selfish, Sometimes religious conviction is so in- no helpful light and | | IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL OUR WISE MEN jm althe hundred milli What! It cannot be! wranglin Qighty nation of @ fee, submitted for the pressing of the has 21 husbands ed million# because of thelr gubernatorial pants? hey the market for Metee Wk, G nn |venerante commeay is practically confined to the lead- Lew es for tile | th what sual and thoughtful pur ing manufacturers of the so-called ait |pose they administer these, our af. package medicines, who buy only wh. | faire. | the very best, and that the manu- Q jen was vaccination first |" wa) nor hear Alaska? focturers of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup introduced in the United States? muons . | Pepsin are the largest users of the A. Vaceination was introduced in| A* yes, to be sure, they are dis-|1 best grade of Egyptian senna hehe United States July § 1811. Ben ing questions of moment con leaves in the world. i) Waterhous Professor of | © g our great territory. Appro- The potency of a tea brewed from senna lea stipation has lo ns not only by t in fact, senna five centuries. a tendency to be or is < Pneumonia mation is set |“backing up” causes the h | hose increases sure, which | phy After recov | wreckage—the battle—which resolution. on a cold that rid of. damaged air easily develop of the lungs. Such cases continue under a physician’s care and freq that nature is te CKS eae ia Yick goin Cas i More Than 17 Million Jars Used Yearly Ne | | jurea to promote the welfare of They are—are dis This Tells You How to Get Benefit of the Best Senna Fi Grade of Egyptian Senna Leaves used in ee pouaie Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Feed world do not hesitate to say that medicinal herbs, roots, oils, ete., sion, but by the public general: ta has been known and used in medicine fc grades of senna, such as are usu- ally sold at retail, have, however, of Pneumonia ia No. 2 of a series of advertisements, prepared ysician, explaining how nee Oe ss See, mong mefnsfer an Mame continued Cold—often | favorable foothold for i . And Rub may be of value aS bes cells of the lungs. An inflam- is thrown off which causes} the air cells to solidify, thus preventing the natural flow | of blood thru the lungs. This | harder, just as stepping on a | why, during this disease, the sician watches the over- | burdened heart so carefully. |are filled with a mass of rid of by a process known as Frequently, flamed spots remain, conges- tion persists, cough hangs on, |and the least exposure brings If neglected, tions should be made to see On the Issue of | Americanism There Can || Be Mo Compromise ANK CRANE by Vraok Crane) I often think of that motto of Socra’ “Nothing too much.” | And of the Frenchman's quip, “Our | are our virtues carried to excess.” | Of course, on the contrary, there those so broad they are exceedingly so gentle they are mushy, and so tole they are quite willing to discuss the ability of burning up an orphan es Once President Grant removed a po master from office in North Carolina, ¥ the senator from that state remonst | at this interference with his perquisii and asked the President why he the man, Grant replied: “Oh, he was t unanimous.” The fact is that life is very much walking a rail of the railroad; it is hard keep one’s balance. | What everybody needs is a little of thing else. Efficiency generally lacks p allax. This narrowness has many names shapes. We call it selfishness, intolet bigotry, fanaticism. It undoubtedly as sweet by one name as another, Youth is impatient with age, and old p ple are harsh with young; religioniste d nounce scientists, and the latter pooh-po right back at them. Alas that every thusiasm must have its seamy side, a that men fighting for a noble cause m use the same bitterness, violence, and int erance other men use in fighting for and loot! Ha, Ha! Absurd! But you jon! jbave your joke. Ha! Hal Hat A Dayton girt only 22 years Women are ‘tainly hard to please. i over @ tallor’s the better grades of ves to relieve con- ing been recognized, he medical profes- for more than The cheaper ripe and cramp & osm attacks the air;tinuing the rebuilding ess. |. Nightly applications | Vick’s VapoRub will aid ture in this work. Vicks acts locally by stimul tion thru the skin to di out the inflammation, the blood away from the gested spots and relieve cough. In addition, the dicinal ingredients of V are vaporized by the heat. These vapors breathed in all night le pony bringing the medica bear directly upon the a i i ould be rubbed over the throat and chest til EBs y arf is d—ti sp! on thickly and ered with hot flannel Leave the clothing around the neck and the clothes arranged in the of a funnel so the . arising may be freely inh If the cough is annoyin swallow a small bit of Viel the size of a pea. ad to new users wi sent free on request to th Vick Chemical Company. Broad St. Greensboro, N. up and matter of the blood eart to pump the water pres- is the reason ery the lungs debris of the must be gotten in- nad is hard to get such passages may serious disease should always juent examina- properly con-

Other pages from this issue: