The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 3, 1920, Page 6

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Zhe Seattle Star out of city, S0¢ per month; ¥ montha, 1 DP e’hsahe's year, $5.00, in the of Washinat Outside the state, Se per month, for 6 montha, or $9.00 per year. ly r, city, Llc per week. The Hoover Nonpartisans Tt was too good to be true—and therefore not so dis- prpenting when it turned out the way it did, en the Hoover club was called into being recently by suave Herman Ross, who is held high in the council the Democracy of this state, more Democrats (with a} nded than Republicans. At that time, Hoover's gm claimed i. the Democrats. Nevertheless, | ¢lub was organized as a nonpartisan Hoover club, and speakers, including Charles G. Heifner, noted for sev- things, were loud in support of the idea that party are, to use the vernacular, “the bunk,” and it's the Hoover, that counts. now, it appears, Hoover prefers to make the presi- race, if he makes it at all, on a progressive Repub- platform. Do we find the erstwhile enthusiastic Dem- still shouting the praises of Hoover, the man, still n isanship? th, me! Not so. - Instead of meeting the situation squarely in the face, setting out to capture the republican delegation of this for Hoover, we venture to say that Heifner, Ross, other “leading” Hooverites in the “nonpartisan” club, be leading the parades against him if he actually gets G. O. P. nomination. ch is politics. Lift Up Your Eyes city stood amazed; out in the velvet night massed stood in silent ecstasy; preachers with their con- stood in unvoiced awe gazing up; mariners on oad decks of ten thousand ships stood at their posts in quiet reverence; men and women everywhere it the contagion of the revelation, looked up and away | the rut of routine, and were caught in the spiritual) H that glimpses .the infinite at work. high above the little world of men was a heaven with other worlds; worlds upon worlds, glowing with the rainbow colors in procession; immensities on immen- pargding before the hosts of heaven, and calling to) fery fibre of the universe “Glory, Glory, Lord God Al-| ighty, Heaven and Earth are full of Thet, Heaven and rth are igre J Thee, Lord God Most High!” N is? this nappens every night, so far as the heavens) ; the only lacking element in the picture is poor, blind, benighted man keeps bowing down to wood stone, and doesn’t, lift up his eyes to the eternal hills the glory and the majesty of creation are displayed. | uds piled up miles high; glowing with life colors;| tier than any mortal mountain range; more wonder-| ‘than any earthly architecture; clouds above us, some-| almost enfolding mankind with their marvels, and only time man notices them is when it rains and he left his umbrella at home. wonders of God are common; so common that many) their reverence on the imitation pasteboard settings men, and give more praise to the painter of a die than to the creator of an ocean. Ruling the Home Two ladies discuss the question of who should rule in the ) One of them, herself unmarried, says, the husband, ‘women like to be dependent. The other, married, says, wife, but the husband must not know it. Beth speak the woman's standpoint, and their answers do not n to be so very far apart. efficient the average woman may be as a teach- a counsellor, a household manager or a social leader, are certain respects in which she is distinctly depend- She does not do the hard work of a farmer, a carpen- or a ditch digger; she hes never been a great inventor mechanical appliances; she is not worth much in a hand-| ind fight; she has not usually accomplished much in the d of politics or business management or military leader- ; and motherhood handicaps her dreadfully. In all the history of the race she has needed the strong arm of some man to help her battle with the world. “But the man in the boat does not want to be a nonentity. would rather row or sail or paddle a little craft that he} ds and that is all his own than be a mere passen- er on some larger vessel that is quite beyond his control. | trusts and loves and marvels at it; but he wants the fun ‘of running it. | _ And however hard a woman may find it to manage com- things, ft is not so with people. There her forte lies, d the more she can trust and love and marvel at a man, greater joy she gets when he answers to her touch. that means human fellowship as well as skill, and it that the dependence which she willingly accepts is rity. For how can she be inferior to anyone when she helps to fix the purposes of the strong man who man- ings and affairs. . " open and soon thereafter got an at Thrift Is Wealth | | One of the nation’s leading advertisers has just broad- ‘casted a new advertisement at an expense, perhaps, of ds of thousands of dollars. The first display line by in that ad says: “ECONOMY IS WEALTH.” ‘This line took up about one-sixth of the space occupied ' the whole piece so that it cost the business concern 10,000 at the lowest calculation to shout these three! at the American public: “ECONOMY IS WEALTH.” There is nothing truer in the whole world—not the sun| stars, nor daylight and darkness are truer. Thrift! ounts—it spells the difference between poverty and pros- rity. In America the fat days far outnumber the lean ys and the man and woman who save reasonably when | ‘they are flush are not the ones who are next to beggary when the brief seasons of hard times come. The common! sense person realizes this and prepares; poverty lies only| with the downright foolish. That there are exceptions merely proves the rule. “ECONOMY IS WEALTH.” And bitterly will the present-day new-rich—who think they are rich—realize this truth when the evil days come. | You know them-—you see them every day squandering | their money to show you and your wife that they have it) to blow; you see their kind in every store, in every theatre, | in every church. And later on, wheh the panicky days : roll around i age en ae ‘eg you will find them ig everybody and eve ing, exce' hei. wn aclind salve. rything, pt their o' | WE'LL SAY SO Greetings! For months we've trying to discover why ft in called the “fair price committee, Now we've found out A woman rune it eee The fair price committee uright fix & price on potatoes, if there were | any pots oem, see Nothin’ knocks enthusiasm Uke experience eee Pittsburg officials may the city has saved $45,000,000 by abolishing the amoke evil, There's just one thing about it that interests us; What did the city do with the money it saved? eee Senator Newberry has been found | g@ullty, All who believe he will serve | ® term in prison, please raise their right handa, Ah, we thought #0, . oe Spring having come, the urban population ts about to divide itself into two classes, one composed ot} men who get fun out of making a garden and men who get fun out of men making @ garden, “ee A Good Place to Die As soon as they can make arrange eee The early bird often has to spend some time waiting for the worm, see “One of the greatest benefits of prohibition,” reports Old Bport, “be that you are not held up in the/ street any more by samebody*bum: | ming the price of a drink.” eee All the News From Hicksville HICKSVILLE, ~ Spring arrived | Saturday afternoon and caused a gbod deal of controversy, some claiming it was the end of bad Weather and others arguing it meant | | | Worse weather. Mrs. Mott Ogden, wife af Mott O« | den, proprietor of the American| House, has worked the name of the} hotel in red silk on all the napkins | and tablecloths of the hotel and will do the same to all sheets and pillow cases. The oldfashianed of] cloth splashers over the washstands in the guests’ rooms have been removed and white splashers of cotton cloth put up in their place, The new aplashers are decorated by handwork done by Mrs, Ogden. The old «plash ers were easier to keep clean but did not look so good as the new onen. fhe federal government has de | cided not to make a recount, the ame causing much indignation among our citisens Chester Hopewell reports the high water of North Fork as doing nx damage. | Greenberry Robinson, who went to Seattle to consult a spectatiat re garding the lamenena in his left foot did not have to have any teeth pulled or have his appendix cut out aw he expected, but had a naft corr removed Mace McMartin began several weeks ago to take up the fad of| sleeping with the bedroom window tack of rheumatiam. He claims, how. | ever, the rheumatiam gras caused by getting up in the morning to shut the window down. ‘Therefore he has begun work on a contrty ance by which the window can be put down witheut the trouble of getting up in the cold. No signa here of a lowering of the} high cost of Fresh eggs still! learn that he te reco A severe burn Monday.—8t. Cloud (Mine) Journal. eee “That's all right about the Green| Lake woman who calls her husband ‘Ouija’ because he always mys just | hat she wants him to,” postearda | 3. C.." “but a woman tn our burg ails her husband ‘Oulja’ because he ever tells her anything she doesn’t | already know.” cee But, as the “I haven't got a woodyard, but I run & chop house.” Chinaman remarked, | THE POLITICAL ANVIL CHORUS BY HARRY B. HUNT HICAGO, April 3.—Gov. Low ‘s boosters maintain they are not stitious, but one can not help often they knock Wood, “I have a who will emerge victorious from the Chicago convention has not yet been mentioned,” a political philosopher told Victor Heintz of the republican national committee, the other day. | In it powsible he was thinking of | William Howard Taft? Taft's about | the only republican not mentioned to | date, Another “dark” one from the tn most inner sanctum of G. O. P. head quarters: “Gov. Allen (of Kansas) is loaded for bear, but he's keeping his pow. der dry and holding his fire till the whites of the delegates’ eyen begin IBERTY MARKET Pike and Liberty Theatre * that the man|” HAs HA ~ Hat PyBC } THE SEATTLE STAR--SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1920, TM SURPRISED, GUGRETT, TO SUS You CARRYING FLOWERS AROUND IW ONLY THE WOMEN AND Sissy Avrs i | pads ‘ | Nothing needs the application of reason like ought to be afraid to eat poison, or to catch cold, or to stand on the railway track in | front of an advancing locomotive. preserved by such cowardice, Ce L FGOU Aw —_—: “se RiauyT, Doetwr, ONLY Bvae GOT wr.n~ Ive GoT A vs GoT A PUNNY FeelInG In MY HEAD. wa — too toe At Eastertide ilies blooming fair and white Kissed at dawn by morning light; Aloft the angels sweetly sing Carols o'er the sleeping King. He who suffered cross and thorn Arose and lived on Easter morn When the angel oped the tomb. Empty—but a golden room. The Son of God so crucified, With Love the power of Death denied. His tortured heart could still forgive, Thru time eternal, Love shall live. cau Ea: head of by —LEO H. LASSEN. One of the new cabinet officers ts) to be the secretary of national tn Somebody wuggests that the profit tern be boiled jn oll. N matter what | per | cise; fear. w fying machines, Death is as a candle, fascinating to us poor moths who flutter out our twilight existences on this plane. Most of our pictures on the screen are piddiing, yet it is Spiritualian may be confusing_to be- winners, as the alphabet is confus ing to the mind of childhood; 2021 Laurelshade Ave. JAPS HOG F Editor The Star: While your pa-|They were not playing a regular in exte telligence. For which job we faver you in this country, it's awaken th Charlie Chaplin or the manufacturer4 something that works out for the! Japanese st f oulja board. D ake C. W. Hamley Memory Expert and Teacher Starts Memory Classes in Room 312 Railway Ex- change Building, Elliott 2100, Office Hours— 11 A. M. to 4 P. M. The principles involved in mem ory culture are taught in 5 les vons. You start on Monday even ng and finish on Friday evening Class howrs, 7 p.m. to § p. m New class starts every Monday Price of course, $10, I do not collect in advance for the course. I guarantee to improve your memory 100 per cent in the firet lesson; and I collect $2 after each If you are dissatisfied or disinterested, the leanon will cost you nothing. Anyone wishing to reserve a went for these lessons ean do so by writing or phoning the above address. Ladies and men, ages 10 to 70 years, make up my classes I also have for your purchi the late Roth Memory E 5 which are self-instructive for home study (the same course I teach), You can call and get them at the above addrees, or they will be sent you parcel post, ©. O. D., the complete booklet ourse for $5 lesson. Rev. M. A. Matthews Will preach a sermon Sunday morning enti- tled— LIFE’S WITNESSES At three o'clock he will discuss the sub- ject— LIFE’S WORKERS The public is cordially invited to the three o'clock Knights’ Tem- plar Service. In the evening he will discuss the subject LIFE’S REAPERS A Welcome for All FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Seventh and Spring benefit’ of John SECOND AVENUE Main 2947 , the priv Did you ever stop to consider the convenience in having a checking account? For instance, when you pay the telephorie bill, the gas bill, or light bill, you have te go to the respective offices each month, which may be con- siderably out of your way, and it happens quite often that you have to wait in line, All norm The child's life, for instance, is made safe by his fear to touch a red hot | ¥ stove. So all the great laws of nature have their |rearguards of terror. FE | body, of breathing and nutrition and exer- of the mind, such as the results of study or of idleness; and of the soul, such as the consequences of love or of hate, of purity or of uncleanness; every one of these | laws carries with it a corollary of pain and loss, and rational people ought to fear them. But superstition is plain fear without any , and is utterly demoralizing. is afraid to overeat it makes him healthy; if he is afraid of ghosts it makes him a fool. If he is afraid to lie or do a mean act it produces growth and makes manly; if he is afraid to be happy or to leave the house in the morning starting off with his left foot instead of his right, it | stunts his manhood and makes him childish. | N THE EDITOR’S MAIL » SAY SO! Everything that was ever brought to light on the material plane was first thought out by the «#pirits, in cluding wireleas, electricity and mag-| automob! great ELLA PACKARD, ding uch effort rican people to A of writing CHERR Fe “Ss, cub goguns Qui Se aii ALASKA BLDG Our Home ederal Member gone rve Bank. SEATTLE fear is not sport AYFTIELDS mM ineSeattle, 1 All Fear and Reason ny VRANK CHA (Copyrig 020, by Frank ¢ “ harmful. One 1 ~ | are the worst. Life is Psychic research intelligent al and some harm. | instances where a Every law of the his leg; or how a dream on July 7 a Now, if you will in no fear that has If a man | be both happier shown in th of no help; they do him more | calamity, but is coming, the best a stout heart and a nonsense of dread. |of just what I witnessed at two young men, like myself, ever anz itor of 6 Star: Under the of Seattle's public parks yester-|lous to yet a chance on one of the ing of “Spook Stuff,” Dr, Frank | day, March 28:° grounds. Some of them, being dis- Crane says that the whole subject) 1 thought I would like @ Lttle|#usted, went back home, others Aritualiom is rubbish, And spir-| Sunday morning exercise after) Went down to thjs small boys’ dia- ituaitem is older than religion! working all week inw so I took} mond, the only available place a run down to the Collins city| Where playfield, with the intentions of @ little ball, But when 1| them). there I found the grounds oc-|to the netism jeupled by Jap Do you know that the universe is! whites lookin: being able filed with invisible wires over which|to play because ¢ hese Japanese | monds mediums on a higher pia are able having possession of the| but to to hear sounds thousands of miles away—voices, thoughts of this world YY aR eo jot the en me there, I boarded pure oy How many have been driven mad ¢ to Walla W Let me say in this connect at thin park there are three ball grounds, No, 1, @ regulation dia- mond, and No, 2, also a regulation tiamond, both laid out by the park partment. In another part there a halfsized diamond, usually 1 on week days small school |you to self. but) ™ when one grows up to comprehend boys « gitts to ay “deer baat | “On® spiritualism, they find that it is the, 0" When I arrived at this park,| yfore grandest, most elevating sport, re-| about 930 or 10 o'clock, there was! a head ligion, wclence or humbug. ever|®9 ground No, 1 a baseball game known. lin progress between two Japanese jeclubs, and as soon as this one was finished another one was com- |menced by them. On grounds No. |2 there was another Japanese club. | he to| ame but just “practicing” or using | the |the grounds in general H this time there was in the you neighborhood of 25 or 30 American ; On the Issue of | Americanism There Can | Be No Compromise Of all the fool, silly, unintelligent child- — ish, wicked, sickly, perilous, and abominable mushrooms and toadstools that grow in the garden of the human mind, premonitions some good (nothing, I suppose, is impos- sible), but a lot of it certainly does do We have all read those strange | P. m. on Saturday and afterwards finds out that at that same hour her husband broke his friend had an ear bitten off in Wolf- ville, Ariz., on the same date. . business and premonition disease off from your mental slate and determine to indulge and wiser, il The utter uselessness of premonitions That even if true they are weaken us and render us feeble to resist misfortune. (probably not number of |@nd made « special plea that he | give us the use of one of the dia When I left, about noon, both |eould have had the use of some other part of the park where there |were no Japs. While you are investigating, I am sure it | Sunday Yours for ‘oporais will be received Departm until 10 o'clock & m., 0, for delivering cotton until 10 o'clock a m, |. for Selivering damar Pu and the like may do wife is depressed at 3 friend has a horrible nd later discovers that sponge all this dream no sense to it, you will © not fortify us to meet And if trouble way to meet it is with brain unfogged by the the Japs were not playing good enough for Two of our members went man in charge of the park being used by the Japanese, no avail, regulation diamonds were in the Japanese clubs, and we would be interesting fos pay this place a visit some morning and see for youn America for Amert W. H. VALENTINE. th one man who passes for is only a figurehead. f Supplies and ent navy Ee Y STREET aaa ca tsa ons sos coerce cn If you could send them iL a check by mail you Ww would save time and in- s convenience, N dition, if you 8 pen to lose their receipt- ed bill, you still have your paid check as a re- coipt. We should be glad to have your account with ALROAPPPOTELE. i us, whether large or small; we have accounts a of less than $100 and en- Hy deavor to treat them N = just as courteously as SS Sisk though they were many thousand dollars, lat. Savings Department | OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS | FROM 6 TO 8 O'CLOCK H Use Our Branch at Ballard if More Convenient. a “SSCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN BANK B ra ae at Ballard. 2 4 j i ; uf Ys

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