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The Seattle Star per month; 2 months, $b: year, $5.00, in the Outside the state, ha, or $9.00 per week. Tho per month, $4.50 for € mont per year, ly carrier, eity, 1 ake} . THE SEATTLE STAR--SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1920. Be wisely worldly, be not worldly wise.— Francis Quarles. e University’s Problem President Suzzallo, at his meeting with ‘University of Washington alumni and friends of the institution in Ta- coma, gave notice of a future possibility which calls for the we consideration of the state. ; : it Suzzallo told the alumni of the extraordinary fi- nancial condition the institution is facing. Its registra- tion, due to the return of service men, has leaped from a normal expectation of 3,300 to an actual attendance of 5,800, ‘This in itself strained the budget to the breaking t. Then the service men, properly enough, exempted from the $10-a-quarter tuition fee for the bene- fit of the building fund. Salaries of faculty members, of course, have increased, as have all other costs. On top of all this trouble, the university is finding itself with a sharp and increasing building shortage. ; As any cuiaibn suspected at the time, the Alaska- Yukon-Pacifie exposition’s “gift” of its buildings to be university in return for the use of the campus has turned} out to be a curse instead of a blessing. These shacks, after requiring years of expensive, upkeep, must be torn down, one by one, and the state, Julled by the thought of the magnificence inherited from the exposition, has failed in the meantime to provide money for replacing the poe igarher At best, Dr. Suzzallo points out, the university wi to call on the next legislature for a staggering total order to maintain itself even on its present basis. He is broad-minded enough to eee also that many other state instituti e similar difficulties. There do on appear to be many solutions of the problem. bond issue does not seem mgm Dr. Suzzallo’s belief way out of tl walled a natveraity to those students who are best raise the scholarship requirements so high tha ‘i eA teicientiy-prepared 70h butterfly-minded boy and $ jot get in. eh . Pevotatioary proposal for Washington, a state | that has always prided itself op the abundance and freedom and excellence of its public school facilities. The situation is indeed, grave. Seems like Frank Hall, one of the operators of the Service club, claims he got the gun found in his posses- sion from U.S. Marshal Jordan, of Nome, who, in turn, fg said to have borrowed it from Sol Warren, the chief's | brother. What's a siz-shooter among friends? harbors an optimistic speculator who posted a tune the other day for the purchase of half a dozen ries. He believes America eg of total ab- c revert to light wines an e. geal the first great seaport city to fall before siege of prohibition. Isolated in our aridity, we de- th that alcoholic blues were not entirely fatal to busi- and pleasure. In fact, we went to the polls and away our rights to an occasional permit for a legal iticians, who for years cried out against pro- go beon converted and laniieed. for the honor of g the resolution that ratified the dry amend-) to the federal constitution. face of all this enthusiasm for thirstlessness, there) who contend that the appetite for kickful bev-| is growing. Home brewing, they contend, has be- come the sport: of housewives, maidens, callow youths | ‘md pious elders. Young women, who as co-eds frowned om the thirsty college youth of pre-prohibition days, now “ask him to call and promise to supply the ginger ale. Whether the wish is father to the thoughts of these @iagnosticians, we do not assume to know. But it is ‘psychologically sound for folks to long for that which is ‘out of reach. Will this longing, we ask, torment the ‘parched nation and terminate in a throw-back to light ‘wines and beer? Ask dad. He thinks he knows. = have been | e emergency is to limit at-| to make efficient use of the privilege—in other | Greetings! A few more words to. leading off with this (News Tem ~ the other extreme) | plece of thinking | It ts economical, also comical. 1] There being no further use for that former barkeeps hat. high silk bate, which wi of undertakers quake grooms. od Britian bride ping bowl, well call it her new spring bonnet curly shavings on it a nifty appea First they boosted skyhigh the Price of men’s clothes, then when we fellows thought 'd steal a march on ‘em by wearing overalla they went and doubied the overall price. But, since they've begun selling sugar by the thimbleful there ts no more demand for sugar barrels. Dad and the boys can wear ‘em. "Member that afternoon when the kids swiped your shirt and pants and you had to go hame in a barrel? Roomy and airy, they are, The dest Greasers paint pretty pictures on thelr barre! sults, Seattle Elks contemplate a million-dollar temple. And we'll wager Aileen Claire's ouija board against Poinderter’s chances for the presidency that the Bills will have ten million dollars’ fun in executing their plan. sman Britten, of the house naval affairs com- ite otter much investigation and aided by navy de- ent experts, is able to announce that by 1923 the States navy will be supreme on the seas. In weight of broadside projectfles, Uncle Sam will have} 688,633 pounds, as against Great Britain’s 484,080. _In total of main battery guns Uncle will have 340, as against Great Britain’s 314. And so forth. Supremacy on the seas! For what? To kill? The smoke stil! clings over the battlefields, the dead are scarcely laid in their graves, the crippled have hardly been D ided with crutches, millions of the helpless are still) less and hungry, and America rises to proudly boast tt she’s about to acquire the supreme power to kill! the same America which, three years ago, offered ten| dominating the world by force of arms. | out the ancient nalln. It), Millions of her young men and all her resources to the |? cause of putting down war, preventing any nation from u ‘Take any old plank, eut tt down to length of foot, carefully pulling Tie it on your hoot with a neat bit of rope (wire | will last longer), and give the merry haha to the shoeman trying to hold you up for $18-a-patr-and-will-be- high. ernext-month shoes. ~ ANNOUNCEMENT CAMP LEWIS WIRELESS New at 904 Third Avense U.S. ARMY GOODS Two carloads enamel ware, cooking ntensils, ete. Fine for Home ase and Camping. Dinner Plates, Bakers’ Plat- ters, Pitchers, Water Pails, Meat Saws, Cook Kutves, Vegetable Knives, Forks, ete. U. & Oltve Drab Bhirte, af etxee, good condition Ihe at America engaged in the world war to secure and per- petuate world peace. Her sole spoils were to be abolish-| ment of militarism and all that that means. Neglecting! her positive power as a victor and devoting herself to the study of and quarreling over dreams, she has permitted | herself to be defrauded of her spoils. The result is that) the cause for which she fought and suffered has been lost| in the fog, there’s no real peace anywhere, and America) feels the necessity of becoming the supreme one in the| business of making other wars. But let us not boast too early over our high-standing as killers. Great Britain will not surrender her naval su- until she has sweated the last shilling of tax - money out of her masses. Also, Japan is no mean candi- date for the supremacy. The world thought it was going to shake off its war parasites and turn to unprecedented production of wheat, fuel, wool and cotton. But, verily, oa, day has dawned for the steel plate and cannon “Bluebeard” confesses he killed four wives. Another case of a man failing to come up to his advertised repu- tation. _ Attorney General Palmer has discovered another as- sassination plot. Must have got jealous of the death ‘motes sent Prosecutors Brown and Carmody. oe It’s all right for the Marconi outfit to talk about tele- to Europe. But we won't be convinced till some- ody invents a sy of telephoning in Seattle. * SPRINT eye esteem RN eI Salmon Hianket, Wool-na U. #, Raine U. #& Ponchos, mr Heavy Auto or blue and plaid . . ie vu. & U. B. Fi U. & Navy Tenta, 9 Government Duck Tarpauiin Gray Wool Yarn, Cotton Batting .......+ ‘ Bale Conducted by Camp Lewis Wireles: | 904 THIRD AVENURP, near MADISON Mail and Express Orders Filled as Hapidly as Possible ~= “ Ash For t . cet Horlicks ORIGINAL Malted Milk A Nutritious Diet for All Ages Quick Lunch at Home or Office Avoid Imitations and Substitutes day about the high cost af everything New York gtr! wears at, thus beating the Duten by | The wooden hat idea ts a fine those tiny beer kegs, it is suggested | and brewers and their best customers knock the bottamn out of the keg and dali it a ‘This ought to lessen the demand for lower the price Mother now reems to have little | call for the old-fashioned meat chop: | the butcher doing the! chopping fon her, #0 she might as| $2.25 to 92.00 | THAT BUNCH { IN ANY WAY 4 AW, DON'T TALK TO MG ABouT OF GRAF TSERE I! HAVS YOU INVES TIGATeD “HS ORGANIZATION ;- —By CONDO| THEY'RGS A PACK A. Anderson, in burglars) seemed times it was in the act. up.” IVUST NATURALLY KNOW uke hse weedee BOARD tt! the teeth? A. There are many causes of brit tle enamel of the teeth. common are: A severe systemic dis ease during the grow ture, For mere than © year T have been | either ta this . | questions of geeerai trounied with gransiated eyelids 1 Reve) Seretios ~4 ‘should not be “dosed® for colds~ apply the outside” treatment— ae YOUR BOOYGVARD” = 307, 008, fg REV. M. A. MATTHEWS will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled, THE POWER | OF THE | UNRESTRICTED SPIRIT In the evening he will discuss the subject, OUR ALTAR OBLIGATIONS GOOD MUSIC You are welcome to all services, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH | Seventh and Spring Dorit let kin b your social handicap” Itian’t necessary tobe barred from the peoege Bo others because of embarrass- ing skin defects. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap help to mak oily, blotchy skins fresher and rors tractive, ‘enerally they clear up th: trouble completely, said le af antec Resinol XHESS THINGS Conducted Under Direction of Dr. Rupert Blue, U. & Public Heaith Bervtce | QUESTIONS ANSWERED Q What causes brittle ename! of tried severat of the cures advertian’ tn the papers, and none of them have done me The most | condition? A. and eruption | tempt doctoring your eyes without of teeth between the ages of 3 to 6.| phynician's advice. A lowered resistance of the vitality|me your name and address I will) of the patient, causing a lack of the| mall you « bulletin on trachoma Inorganse element of the tooth struc | (cranulated eyelids), / quite common, burglars also fail, ‘lalso their pitfalls? things even there also? well, well! To hear you | Editor The Star: 1 terest of our firemen, every elghth ied with of mank as well an the best of this world while the firemen are cc pleasure The last conflagration was example of what firemen are any good. Is there any cure for this You are most unwise to at If you will sen “UNCLE SAM, M.D.” sigheens, HELPS ISOM WHITE dieraee ea to have Isom White, the gallows, reports The Discouraged Burglar When a gentleman of the burgling per- suasion named R, P. Coffey attempted the other day to steal from the home of Citizen | Glendale, caught in the act by Mrs. Anderson, who handed him over to the police. Being haled into court, Burglar Coffey | (and let us not be too harsh with him; other coffees I have met were worse than downcast. caught before,” he told the judge. We have all felt the same way at times. The High School student gets discouraged, and the settlement worker, and the former, and the mother, the banker, the | scientist, the wash-woman, and the mayor. Discouragement is not new, and failure is But the new note in this item is that What! Have the purple paths of dalliance | When we rebel and give up trying to be decent and take to crime, can we fail and make a mess of Bless my soul and talk, Maisie, don't see any use in a girl trying to keep | straight, and that you are tempted some- | times to let go and not be a nice girl any | more, one would imagine that your idea IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL FOR DAY OFF FOR FIREMEN | is about two weeks work desire to aay something, thru The Star, in the tn rélative to| building recreation, for trints, r the generality | mistake being made with this boy. d and they have feelings others more fortunate, who enjoy their recreation and make | tion of the position in which he is | party to the end that office and be pleasures, ined Sun-| days and every day during the week | Vernon where she worked in the tn. and no time to take their wives and | terest of the fund for new trial, she jehiidren for an outing thru our/| finds expressions from all that he beautiful parks and other places of | was mentally deranged from infancy ena|® fall, to, thru the loms of the life of one | the best they could without medicai of their unfortunate memHers, no let | attendance us show the spirit of human kind neas, by advocating every eighth day one of recreatian for our noble and \torgotten firemen, by exhorting our Honorable Mayor to sanction the or. dinanoe prescribing every eighth day one of recreation for the noble fire A TAXPAYER, |COmpone the remnant of the “Old Editor The Star: Mra. M. EB. Skin ner’s endless chain of 19 cents start 19, from | ever felt an unselfish impulse. On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Y BY DR. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1920, by Prank Crane) is that when a girl quits being good an | joins the army of the wayward her troub! are over. And one would suppose, George, that, ag | you say there’s no use being honest and working hard, since the loafers and Yascalg get all the plums, the days of the low lifé are all sunshine. 4 And the whole chorus of whine that con- tinually goes up from the multitude that are apparently breaking their backs under the strenuous load of keeping the Ten Com- mandments, seems to be based upon the as- sumption that those who do NOT keep the Ten Commandments wax fat and kick and have turkey and. fixings every day. It might therefore be well, if you think the righteous have a hard time of it in this world, to go and visit the unrighteous and see how they are enjoying their live: If it’s a struggle to be virtuous, have th non-virtuous no troubles? If to resist tem tation is hard, is yielding to temptation bed of roses? If to be honest is a figh is to be a crook a life of peace and joy? It is true, what you say,* being decent” and straight and loyal and all that is hard, You are tempted to run from it. Granted. It’s clear enough what you want to rum FROM and why. But what are you rum | ning TO? +) The frying pan may be hot, but the is hotter. Cal., he was been “Both I guess I'll give “T’ve re- saying you whenever they got a chance, have in the senate many followers, of the Newberry stripe, who are ag |pelfish and villainous as themselves, |but who lack their ability and cum | ning, and so follow their leaders, These leaders have organized « | new guard to control the republican BRlease wend 19 cents to mve this boy, to Senator Smith, The Stokes Poverett, Wash. Mrs. Skinner has had 26 years’ experience caring for mental de rangements and she saw the awful She visits him at the jail and re- ports he has absolutely no concep. placed e tronage may be secured, irrespective In the work at Stanwood and Mt of the wishes of the body of the par- yy. and the general good of the peo ple. Regardless of what the primary | may Indicate, these leaders behind | closed doors are today laying their plans to cantro]l the republican con- vention and nominate for president the choice of the cabal; and the nom. inee will be the man of their choles) and not the choice of the republican voters, if the leaders succeed their purpose, Shall they succeed? We shall Not blazoned on thetr coat of but cunningly camouflaged will be the motto of the Old Guard, Public Be Damned.” The offices Fe ours. The old guard dies but while life lasts surrenders—the ofs fices, E. LEE, Hanford, Wash. Atlantic City police have issued an | Besides the injury to his head from he was unconscious for cot | hours, they being poor cared for him Did not realize he was injured so badly. MRS. M. E. SKINNER, 3029 Rockefeller ave., Everett, Wash. THE OLD GUARD Lodge, Root, Knox and Penrose Republican " They are four typical Republican party leaders. They are in politics for personal ag- grandizement, regardless of country or public good, Not one of them Ifa INFORMATION Rprron, U, & Public Health Services, Washington, D.C. as having true history of their bayhood days $76.05 contributed from all parts| could be revealed it would be found of the union, More to follow. This’ that they cheated at marbles—raked lorder that » of them misinterpret the order, Main 21947 CHERRY STREET SS § ‘y eats RSS SECOND AVENUE BACK OF YOU THERE IS ALWAYS RESERVE BANK wii N A FEDERAL the stroot, ALASKA BLDG Our Home Federal Member Rese, 243C ANDINAVIAN AMERICAN BANK SEATTLE Bra doh at Ballard; rve MS QA A Bank. Back of every member bank in .the Federal Reserve System fs the strength of the organized banking re sources of the country, By dealing with this bank, which is a member of the Federal Reserve the system's facilities and resources are available to you—virtually just What ts ft worth to you in giving confidence as to the stability of your bank- ing arrangements? Main 1947 N : N \ : ye. My ASSSSSSSSESS All \ APPL POLIO System, iy N iE across N j Soames] CE ‘ SS VG