The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 23, 1920, Page 6

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The Seale Star By mail, out of city, ge per month; 3 months, sioo, € see ee. $5.00, In the y SO a Europe’s Debts FPuropeag unrest shows no indication of being part of a plan for # general repudiation vf war debts, Eventually, there wil) have to be some form of partial repudiation, but it will be postponed as long as possible. When repudiation comes, it will probably be in the form of heavy taxation upon war bonds. It wil! thus try to escape the ugly reproach of n al bankruptcy. “his method could be applied, of course, only to domestic Europe's foreign loans have been issued with the un ding that they shall be.free from all domestic taxa To levy a tax on them would be an act of bad faith Which would have the same il! effect as repudiation. Only if the creditor nations consent to this form of bankruptey i is likely to occur. ‘The most secure of all Europe's foreign debts are thos« | Owed to America. The Europeans must have Americar They cannot now afford to confess an inability to pay what they have already consumed. Otherwise future sup Plies will very largely be cut off. America can curtail her to Europe without great inconvenience. It is different with the money which Europe owes Great in. British prosperity is more closely bound up with Mnternational trade than is America’s. If the European fontinent repudiates its war debts to Great Britain, the latter “would suffer great injury by cutting off its trade with the offending nations. Therefore, it is likely that the British q ent may agree to some kind of informal: cancella- fen if the time ever comes when full payment of foreign ligations cannot be made by the continent. ’ That time, however, has not arrived. It may never com« fa large part of the German war indemnity can be collected auld the continentals be forced to confess a partial in ney, the American people may voluntarily cancel som« the European debts to this country. If not, the ten billior will rank as a first preferred claim. It will probably paid to the last cent, because* Europe must continue to our food and raw materials. Socialists ousted from the New York assembly will carry their case to the supreme court. They will also carry it into the general election. en} | “Woman has been faithful in a few things; now God is to make her ruler over many things.” Susan B. Anthony, mother of woman’s suffrage, years ago. The hour of fulfillment is here. Yet, to face with national woman's suffrage, even the most e of politicians no longer feels that dread thereof he rt ly professed. ere not many evil things to happen when woman was ranchised nationally? Home-life would be destroyed. nation’s moral fabric would be weakened. “Mothc v-lov most beautiful thing in nature, would be undermined. ly every politician was bent upon averting the disaster. it how times have changed! Today politiciang are eager te women on local, state and national committees. with what pride a political leader announces that Mrs. president of the Woman's club, has consented to be- a member of the executive committee of his organiza- @; or that Mrs. Smith, president of the Mothers’ club, will the campaign committee! If it is the universal fault of politicians that they are the to fight a proposed reform, it should be credited to them as a virtue that they are ever quick to recognize and the ee of a reform that has become, ér is about to 5 ne, a fact. that, Jeg leery B. Anthony’s half-century old yphecy, woman ly is enjoying her rulership, even be- nationally speaking, she has had an opportunity to vote president. i A West Virginia man advertises that he makes the moonshine in the county. Here is one case where g won't pay. Keep Our Coal Here 4 freight rates on coul during the warm hs are being asked by the Red Deer Coal Operators’ asso- The applicants, who will be backed by Premier Stewart, of Al- laim that this concession will mean that Alberta's coal all summer with full pay for miners and cars will be that would otherwise be idle, to head off American coal im ports into the Manitoba market. Great! People in the United States paying enormous Prices for cbal and often unable to get any at all, yet this country forces its coal on foreigners who don’t want it, who teps to handicap shipments from this side in orde give their own miners work. f As long as America’s great natural resources are needed * by Americans, they should not go abroad. Homer Cummings’ prediction that the president will be active in the campaign is a hint to buy typewriter rib- bons before the raise. | The Yap Peril ee Considerable trouble of an international flavor may be du: up if the Island of Yap is transferred to the Jap. Britis information indicates this disposition of Yap. Senator Hank is curious to know if it’s true. He pressed the admin- ion for details. There are all sorts of vexatious prob- Jems wrapped up in it. If the transfer is made, will the inhabitants of the Island af Yap continue being Yappers, or will they become Yapa- Nese? That’s something to worry about! Or will they be Yap-Japs? But one thing is sure: Uncle Sam won't be caught napping if the Jap should try to annex Yap to Nippon. EVERETT TRUE |}WOVULD You Give MG THAT SILVGR You |HAVE IN YOUR PocKerT roR SOME OF THIS parer| jMonerY? (== . —By CONDO}! SURE. NOW LOT'S . Hear ‘ou JINGLE THA The New Ruler } | PASTEURIZATION OF MILK | ed Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. & Public Health Service | Im 1907 the U. & public health ser-jof hot milk and a cracker half an ice made a notable study of the milk | hour before bedtime are often of ser ituation in ita relation to the public | vice } health. Pasteurtzation of milk was| jurged as the only dependable means} lof elimindting milk as a cartier of| |certain common communicable dis | leases, such as scarlet fever, diph theria, septic sore throat and typhoid | pareenen fever, | for individual diseere, Following this a commiss Nee marion MBEtOR, pot to consider the milk qu U. & Feblie Menith Service. as It affected the city of Was | ‘Washington, D.C. recommended munietpal past * - “UNCLE SAM, M, b.." will anewer, questions ef grmeral inter only to hygiene, sanitation am ention of disease it w impossible for him te anewer quse- thems of = parety nature, oF te Ad FEATURES * Greetings! Speaking of sex equal ity, a woman may ha uffairn an who HWkew a Of jai but a man's THAT ELUSIVE BOT Editor We'll 8a explore the ut pler D, as ne up and re h waters a OU advired, and he « ported that he fou reoognie the su r Henry: Consulting the oulfa 1 once more an submarine during the », backed out to wea, The crew ne #O exhilarated over the din y that they t aground in the ns wrecked. The bottle drifted onto the beach and was icked up by a missionary nowing what the bottle contained, © packed It and shipped it to the niversity of Warhington for chemi at analysis, & mm there de ared it a prehistoric mitture with which they were unacquainted. The bottle now reposes in the mu. eoum at the university, practically intact. Enough mid?—We'll Say So. eee New York, ro Mayor Hylan writes to the district attorney, never was so good as at present If this news gets around the country it won't make a great deal of difference whether the railroads take off a fow trains er not eee Why the Third Page Was Missing A ENT Just we went to put the ree fall mio ‘Acet- x page i lows) Kee tents will happen —<: later, eee Word comes from Birmingham, Ala, that the “wear overall” move ment ls growing. We don't know just what fe meant by “growing.” Mebby the men are wearing ‘em in bed eee What'l He Do With All His Spare Time? ‘The mayer appointed Tense Naker efty marshal, street superintendent, health of. De a 1100 per month, end on & yea and nay vote the cowneti unantinews!y confirmed vrotntment.—Warsaw (LIL) Bul- cee chard Cre wif, who has been extensively advertined as an In- @ian princess, is shown by Cherokee nm Thad a diver! 1 find that a Ger: | war drift: | 1 into Seattle harbor, intending to| which we have builded with so much pains, blow up the town, but finding your | control ef the} - The Often the strange fact int that the opposite of everythin All forces have their reacti Progress is not the unresis a steady impulse, but sttep in the way. arts forge forward like swea »| struggling, fighting against the adyersary, | gaining ground so slowly th to be losing. There are our institutions for which our fathers died, | we point with satisfaction. the Ten Commandments— the Constitution—Professional | Family—the Nation. We lau Not| them, live for them, die for them. And yet they have their dz j are points of view from wh harsh as a prison wall, an Don't you know that the | set institution which was good? | welfare of men, yet men find |} horror in them. From Aesc | let, so reads the record. | I ran across this passage jin George Gissing’s “Take a man by himself, generally some reason to be | | records to be one-atsteenth Indian. Humph! We know a lot of fellows | who are more than half Indian and they never had any Indian ances tors, either! eee | But, as the railroad superintandent mid, “I don't know anything about Griving « horve, but I can handle the | bies.” MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, | A Certain Retief for Fevertshnems, ‘ Beadache, Stem a Tese Ward Colas i sa bonre. Atl droegame, Beet coer! Keay meled . Address, Sr ectamne. BOTWER CUAY Or Le Rey MVS is contended every | Civilization, religion, the | Our institutions | and intolerable as malignant fate. tragedies have been, not those where the soul struggles against evil, but against the | The gods and their laws are for the “Henry On the Issue of mericanism There Can Be No Compromise 2 | | Man and the Mass BY Dit. FKANK CRANE (Copyright, 1920, by Frank Crane) ocia) organism, and ten a blatant creature, his own, ready for any evil to which contagion prompts him. is because nations tend to stupidity and that mankind moves so slowly; | it is because individuals have a acity for better things that it moves at all. In my youth, looking at this man and that, I | marveled that humanity had made so little progress Now, looking at men jn the mul- titude, 1 marvel that they have advanced so far.” What a light this observation throws upon the doings of men! The German army, composed of quite human beings, for the most part like unto | ourselves, as an Organization, a System, becomes a bloody ogre. The Church, made up of gentle, kindly folk, as an Institution has been capable of what unspeakable atrocities of persecu-% tion and hardness of heart! i Bolshevism, whose devotees dream of Brotherhood and Justice and Equality, is transformed as an Organization with power | into a ravening beast, a slavering monster, The man as an individual, gentle, loving his children, genarous to his neighbors and warm of heart, is often changed, when he becomes a member of a Political Party, a Board of Directors or some other corporate thing, into a blind, inhuman, Vicious pirate. Efficiency is desirable, but efficiency which has dropped Humanity is an unclean his fellows in the to one he become j out a thought of rudes upon us ig is also true. ons. ted advance of | | bas ting wrestlers, ey often seem , for instance, | and to which the Church— Ethics—the | d and magnify ark side. There ich they seem d grim, cruel, most poignant | organized for their supréme | hylus to Ham- | the other day | Ryeeroft”: and there is | found in him, | some disposition for good. Mass him with | Thing, a Horror from the Pit. | After you eat—always (EATON of no value. | sone or two tablets—eat like candy. ib been fined | Instantlyrelieves Heartburn, Bloated $1,000. Epert evidence was given! Gassy Feeling. Stops indi that no remedy exists for baldness. food souring, . the many miseries caused by Vicar Telis How to id-S Stop Baby’ Crying | Acid-Stomach LONDON, Eng. aa 22—To | EATONIC Is the bestremedy, it takes stop the erying of ies at bap the harmful acids and gases right out tinma, the viear of ®t. John's, Wim-| Of the body and, of course, borne, muggents that the comforter, | well. Tens of thousands taken away from the baby before| benefited. ees to satisfy or * ch nould be | Money refunded it enters the church, shoul | iean wis Veaeay it | This Is Official: Baldness Incurable LONDON, April ¥ letwen to the child. Baptists-Do You Kn tion. Since that time ‘pasteurization of milk products, especially ice others The present view of experienced health authorities is well reflected in the following resolution adopted | net long ago by the National Commit tee on Milk Standards “Resolved, that all milk, including that which enters in the preparation lof milk prodnets, empecaily ice! Jeream, be pasteurized and the ef | fetency of the procems be controlled: that much milk be reduced to a | proper temperature at the source of | |supply and kept at that temperature during transportation and until] con | wamed.” Q—-Please give me the name of! some good health pamphiete which | will tell me of a good medicine to| take to build up my system. | A.—It ix footiah to attempt to dod |tor yourself in this way. If you are not well, be sure to go to a doctor, have him exa:ine you and find out what ia wrong. If you will| send ‘mo your name and address, | will be glad to send you « booklet Jentitied “The Road to Health.” This contains valuable health information. | pertain Q—1 have deen troubled with | sleepleswness for about 10 years, and sometimes I do not loae conse} for three nights, What shall I do? A.—Insomnia is often a very stub born condition to treat, tho as a rule success in treatment is usually ob- |tained when the patient's entire mode | jof life can be regulated. This ap | plies to his environment, to his work | to his associations with others, to the| |provision of suitable diversion, to entertainment and the like. As an ‘adjunct to such measures, an abund: jance of fresh air in the home, a hot bath on retiring, and perhaps a cup| Russia says she is ready to pay gold for machinery. ment she offer some commodity that is worth som¢- The story that China and Japan have almost agreed concerning Shantung, means that China has almost Having the league meet in Rome doesn’t tickle the Jugo-Slav. He is afraid it will do as the Romans do. Being a literary gent, d’Annunzio should have known that his sword wasn’t as mighty as Wilson's pen, Ireland R y repealing i a! there fe @ palm for defeating suffrage, let Dela- intment of Greenwood as chief secretary for ing the excess profits tax isn’t as essential as excess profits. jon’t be popular with the Orangemen. [e DR, J. N. MINYON {i Free Examination BEST $2.60 GLASSES on Earth We are one of the few opti in the Northwest that Peally lenses from start to finish, @ are the only one in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. Examination free, by uate op- t it. Glasses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVENUE Between Spring and Renee Editor’s Mail |. IMMIGRATION QUESTION Ediitor The Star: About two weeks Ago the Seattle papers contained an account of a Jap, Otomaboro Akal muing in the superior court for an- | nulment of his pleturebride mar Tiage an the ground that the bride, Tomi Akal, waa not the woman whose picture he had sanctioned. A few days later the papers informed the public that the marriage had been duly annulled. | What I want to know te What) are the immigration officials going | to do about this? What is the prose- cuting attorney going to do about this? This Jap woman ts in Amer- fen by fraud. The fraud has bean recognized by the euperior court, has been acknowledged by the two Japs concerned. len't Unat sort of an of. fense against the law punishable? If not, then why @oos not the Im- migration Bwreau deport the woman who is unlawfully In this country? PUZZLED A. KB. F. VETERAN. HEARTBURN or heaviness after meals are most an- noying manifestations of acid-dyspepsia. KI-MOIDS pleasant to take, neutralize acidity and help restore normal digestion. - MADE BY SCOTT & BOWKE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION MUSTEROLE—QUICK RELIEF! NO BLISTER It Soothes ‘and Relieves Like a Mustard Plaster Without the Burn or Sting Musterole is a cl white oint ment, made with the oil of mustard, It does all the work of the old-fashioned mustard plaster — does it better and does not blister. You do not have to bother with acloth, You simply rub it on—and usually the pain is 1 Many doctors usd pirbes Gas luster. ole and recommend it to their patients, They will gladly tell you what re- lief it gives sore throat, bron- chitis, Ee ie k or en sprains, sore pate eumonia), 30c and 60c jars; hospital #254 You Do Know That the whole world has now become a neigh- borhood—. That no part of it can be permanently health and safe until it is all healthy and safe / : That in China there is one Christian physi- cian for about every 400,000 people? Not much chance for a sick baby there. That in Africa there is one missionary for 1,500,000 people? Not much opportunity to learn about God. That in Assam with a population of 7,000,000 there is not a single hospital for women? What if your mother lived there? That in Bengal only one per cent of the peo- ple can read? Not much outlook for progress. Thatifyour little daughter lived in India you would have married her off at eight years of age? That if she became a widow her lot would have been unspeakably miserable? That in the non-Christian world there are hundreds of millions who have never yet heard that Christ came? This is the world Christ came to serve. That it can never become safe until men become better — That men can become better only as Christ'is made known to them—_ Northern Baptists seek to raise next week One Hundred Million Dollars to finance the New World Movement and help bring Christ to mankind. Do You Care? How Much? —~ Quicken!"

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