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The Seattle Star . owt of city, Ste per month tm the State of Wash tis the customary fate of new as superstitions.—Hueley. estaurant Men—and Japs| restaurant gurbage had Kir ti a few commercial hen came the order to put the white they bid up the pric % is practically prohibitiv NT MEN THEMSELVES issue of the confessed the ous. how long will the high prices in this respect ue? Is any one so gullible as to bel the will continue to pay them when whi com. will have been completely wiped out? when that occurs, things’ will go back Sonditions, when restaurant men were of to have somebody cart away their years ago, in county value Japs of out of until ES. A ation raisers AND ADMIT publ caterers’ to y too garbag that, tn the consideration of the Tindall bill Wwall of the restaurant men is merely a wai ie born out of their Jap connections. the Tindall bill existed monopoly of the hog Mot now be threaten Would not have ob) t a be Jap monopoly IS ney in this one industry Control in other industries. Must stop the Japs at several rowing the years ago, industry ant law restaur coming If it will gains it ms th re every opportunity Tindall bil) ts one of those opportunities, Mot the false wail of the restaurant men kill measure. all, the democrats may nominate opines Gil Gardner. It’s only fair it every generation should have an oppor- to pass on the Peerless one. Platforms Politics Is a street car. candidate {s the conductor. conductor stands on the platform. does he stand on the platform? collect. would you lke to open your newspaper some find a party platform reading something like le we recognize that the opposing party, being has made many mistakes, we hasten to add difficulties of administration have been many Pie believe that, in most cases, our opponents | striven to do all that lay in their power for the ef our common country. @esire to desist from the usual bellyache about party. We neither denounce it, nor view with alarm, and, altho we intend to oppose vigorously, we are convinced that the ft survive should it win at the coming elec- it has a very fair chance of doing. the other hand, we regret to say that we have W yellow dogs, boneheads and misfits in our own and some of them are apt to get on the ticket sort of skuliduggery and chicanery, in which Propose to bounce a few rocks off their heads bask all decent citizens to ald us in so doing. ‘believe that the time has come when sensible appreciate this platform, and we would than go into office mouthing the usual and bunk which attracts the boobs.” it surprise you to read @ platform like that? y it’s a different kind of a jury this month. » Henry Van Dyke, former American minister to Netherlands, who has just returned from a three tour of the Orient, declares that pleasant between the United States and Japan are for all nations bordering on the Pacific. they are. But to the majority of the people on Pacific coast the “pleasant relations” existing this country and our little brown neighbor reminiscent of those relations that come to ‘&@ week and stay a lifetime. “Oddly enough, announcement of further ovement in Mr. Wilson's health came day after congress adjourned. It would help some if politicians would try experiment of selecting a candidate to the people. *€ 8 aton. 54.60 for € montha OF $9.00 per year, Published Datty by The st Dditehing Ov, hone Main # months, $1.50 1 Senne. ot she om By carrier, city, onthe, 92.78 Tbe pes lie p year, month, i. truths to begin as heresies and to _ Rare ‘Exceptions among politicians in to take what and to turn down the lightning The general rule te no office, ho nominat r who can tell where next But the . exceptions. flatly refused for vice-president was Silas Wright the nomination f swevelt tried to sidestep to be free to run for Silas did it be tial nomination. that democracy should name Mremocracy thought one American who femocratic nomination citizen refuse There w onal didn't Theodor years later years later. the son idency higher office four Polk had s had figured it out in Van Buren once again. ntly, and sought to salve the Van Burenit naming Wright, But, according te Wright, it wasn’t the right thing for democracy to do, nor for him ot aid something to the effect that— ner be right than be Vice-President Wright.” loe-pre cause won prea crats pretend to have party differences, But | in state and county affairs, there can't be even the pretense. Why not nonpartisan elec- tions then? The Cubs Winslow Kellogg, a Trinity county, California, hunter, trapped a mountain lion. Today that lion is as tame and faithful any well-trained dog and Is the man's bunting companion. This transformation | was brought about by kindly words, kindly treatment and kindly training. No beating, no punishing, no imprisonment turned the cub of @ fierce mountain lion into a pet. But there fairly, as k as ‘These are boys They did some diy, ax the ton cub | and girls who “have gone wr thing others frowned upon. ‘robably they aren't “bad,” but they are headed that way. And does society take them as the hunter did the lon cub, teach them the better way, train them to go that way, and reward them for thelr effort? Or does society shut them up in cells with older, more vicious, more criminal, and permit the youth to be trained by those experienced in crime and vic *. Labor Isn’t Red Again American labor has spoken for Americanism, aba agalrist Bolshevism The A. F. of L. has refused to paint itself with the red of radical extremints. The A. F. of L. at its Montreal convention net its foot down squarely and heavily upan all thone Bol shevistic “iams’—the soviet form of government, the } communist party, the anarchist, the I. W. W., and the One Big Union. Labor—in America at least—is conservative. It hankers not to follow the rainbow of extreme radicalism into unploneered paths or across uncharted seas, American labor ts opposed to class government. Unioniam ts plenty good enough for American labor. Unionism, as practiced and preached in A. F. of L. halla. has won more for American labor in @ month tA Bolshevierm has won for Nussian labor tn all the months since Lenine and Trotsky turned things upside down at Petrograd. Thus, from a purely selfish stand | point, unionism phys better than Bolshevism. For the Public and the nation it is infintely better. jority of the A. F. of | nized both of these facts, convention delegates recog: Give Jawndee a free hand and John Bull will never get a monopoly of the world’s oil. | —Greenville (S. C.) Piedmont, Slush fund: Any sum of money used to reg the candidacy of the opposing can- idate. In many particulars a political convention| is very like a wake. But it doesn't shed any tears for the dead ones. How can you expect to buy a cigar for five | cents with vegetables as high as they are? In political circles the one-step has been discarded in favor of the side-step. We'll Say So | Today's Best Bet—Lotta money in these days. coe WHO SAID HE WENT TO VICTORIA? Editor We'll Say So: Note you me where I've been. Been away the summer. Spent the summer | Sunday out at Woodland park. back on the job ready for the of the winter's work.—Yr. obdt. Henry. letter from your Applicant—Wel |friendly when we |haven't been car spondence, mum. Mrs. Ippi is sa! gest mouth in th One Indy auton cops are awful fli time she passes o: ‘Men talk thru their hats; women ik about ‘em. 5 cannery man informs us that to the shortage of sugar he Hihave to CAN a lot of PEACHES | — o- he MEBBE HE THOUGHT WE | DIDN'T | Baitor Well Say So: Do you Minow what kind of a noise @ scare- lives in Roswell erow makes, so I'll know when I . fear one? Yours respectfully, Ire Sponsible. Yes, certainly. eee Old G. O. P. threw out the league mations plank, #0 the Dems would - a ‘one plank, anyhow. eos JOY OF LIVING t house with thin walls) If you don’t live in such an apart- it imagine it. (Voice from next apartment) “Per- “mit me to die at your feet.” (Other voice) “I see no objection to that All papa said was that you t hang around here.” see LIMITED ‘Census worker said the other day ghe asked a woman whether she could read. She answered, rather _ Besitatingly. that she could not, and then hastened to explain: . went to school but one : that was in the evening, hadn't no light and the _ ea at come.” Said she peared not to not . n | ship $80 clothes 1 . Be that York are on stri DR. EDWAT Spirit Comm light. Produc and " Automatic Sealed Question subjects of hum Areas your quer ative or friend ¥ out. Awk then « your name wit and they will larle wh King, Ty, who will de Admission HELP! HELP! Lady of the House— jhad his back to her, around and holler and w just kept on going A London firm has promised sell them for $32 sell ‘em in London? as it may, Thirteen thousand barbers In Demonstrating The Dead Return Come and See ted paychic. nealed questions, # Have you &|town to get trimmed. last mistress? | oe 1, mum, we was parted rying on . humortet Wilson is #0 is because he One well known us that the reason strong for McAdoo wants to keep the White House in jthe family, This humorist id to have the big-| wrong, ‘The reason Wilson |strong for McAdoo 1s |wants to keep the family White House. tell but we , no corre: is all is #0 8. because e in the it informed us that rts, Said that every if he would turn REV. M. A. MATTHEWS will deliver a sermon Sunday morning en- titled ne, no matte ice . it, . to y and don't they in this countr Why Rose Vineyard o- New ke, But “Remembering Till He Come: ‘In the evening he will discuss the sub- | ject— “The Spiritual or Rationalistic Church—Which?” Good Music You are welcome to all services, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Seventh and Spring RD K. BARLE snications ing, Independent Slate - writing 4 answered op all nan interest, Ad tion to some rel- where they pass me au h place respond in the through I be agsiated by who will anaw: d Jeanie F liver @ lectur be, “| erate to In national politics, republicans and demo-| are boys and girls who aren't treated a8| work in them are # The ma-/ have to go to a barber shop in either | he| THE ‘Revolution SEATTLE STAR Sim | Only One in Every 150 i dach — Arms BY HERBERT COREY June 20.—Thin tn revolution, That an extracr MEXICO CITY, Jan extraordinary is, It seema at first glanc dinary revolution, No attention to it thar y mo up our w Ko me in, Py murdered, every responsible the government ular offices shifted, and yet every ms to be functioning abo It is true that the railroad pay for But it will There lutionary hardly it has b few politica penitentiary when the the republican Carranza w head of me a sident out changed thing nee ut as usual men did period of 10 to them in di no looting, the paid bills in blood at all was shed annow that th held in the not to be shot 1 by begins to think rstands, The people of tired out. They do not want to fight nr more, There are 15,060,000 people ir this republic, under arms They go about bests they may BUSINESS MEN TIRED Or» BE 1ELD UP" On my way in I met an Ameri can traveling man who is trying t buy up the product of various Mex! can factories, He told me of one cot ton mill which, to quote him, “the most up-to-date mill I saw,” and of a beer-bottiery in active | operation which is the lar gest in the world of Ger many, Maybe he is wrong. But it is an immense plant The beer bor mins thelr laye time wan army rev its cant ar one or be arid hardly 100,0000 are The rest a their business was ever he anys, outside lery and the cotton mills and the plant in which allingn® made all been jheld up from time to time by ban jdits posing as patriots. No wonder jthe men who own and other | plants and the men and women who ck vernment are have thene of the process will do banditiem ts of if Any for them Metopped On the fay to Mexico City the railroad paases thru a land which ia, In spots at least, as rich as any land In the world. Peons were trri tating the surface of the Jand by | means of wooden ploughs drawn by | oxen. The same plough is in use| today in Palestine, It was in use| there two thousand years ago. Or here and there did one see animals of the beef sort Never were there more than two or three at a time. Horses seemed not to exiat. TERED KRABLE HOVELS The few people visible along the railroad line sheltered in miserable |hovels made up of sia and bits of dobe and stone and wood. Smoke leaked impartially from the crevices. Teeging ebfidren be. sieged the passenger carn They were clad in tags and fut ters of torn cloth. At one station girl, perhaps 13 years old, mat jin a doorway. From her attitude she mileht have been sick, As Ags watched abe shifted the filthy rem-| nant of cloth she wore about her} shoulders. Then we saw lunderneath it she was absolutely | naked. Th road | that peroun | well t stone ® a © only out mere re were at Intervals along the| the remnanta of settlements had at oné time been pros ‘The houses had been large, abje affairs of are roofless and their walls been battered thru. |They would fit very well in the | devastated part of France. On the sidetracks were the steel skeletons of railroad cars which had been |burned. At one station the bones of dozen or #0 locomotives were | heaped upon a side track. The ute | limit of a railroad tie in supposed to be four years, The ties on the) road from Laredo to Mexico have not been replaced for |years. The train rattles to tune of loose rail ends. Nothing, apparently, h fone in Mexico City since Diaz's time. In the center of town in| what will be, eventually, an opera house, second only to that of Paris, But the steel of the naked dome juts stiffly into the air, Diaz began it and no one has finished Jit. The steel frame of what will bo the house of congress ts rusting Jin midair, Diaz began it and no one finished it. Ten years of con stant eternal warfare put a bar to| Mexican progress, The Mexican peo- ple have lived as best they could, thanks to their possession of a wonderfully fertile land, But they have not been able to go ahead. ‘The least muspicion that a Mext can had money wns sufficient to bring down upon him a horde of hungry patriota Everywhere there are fire arms. I have seen boys who did not seem a day more than 12 years old |rying six-shooters in thelr by Some ers have two Prosperous men who a a youn guns on might they are of ver-studded belts belted t ctorn or lawyer that ty wear sil to support their |automatics, Fat men who look |like aldermen wear large pearl handled six-shooters, If one asks, one is assured that they belong to the army. But there is no other} visible sign. A Mexican soldier need not necensarily ar a unt The leader of “n parade was clad in y “nobby sulting’ with little belt about his middle captain wore a mackinaw coat of the gene had a pepper-salt jmixture, a Stetson hat and two |guns, Yet there is no disorder | Smiles and good humor grect one | everywhere, The explanation seems to be that the country was heartily sick of the Carranza regime the best from | administration. home One Is and is hoping for the De la Huerta Gospel Aud'torium 1414 Seventh Ave. ri Sunday afternos nd evening two stirring addresses by H. A. IRONSIDE 300 P, M—Antichrint Nen ie Conference uly 2 to 5, CRAIN, of Roston of Ban Die R. FP, BLLION « will participate A cordial welcome to all oy er ee ERETT TRL SAY, EVERETT, OPEN THAT WINDOW ALK TH WAY UP, WILL YOU =x PpEecausS %& WANT To THROW i a MY @HEST— HA EVERY YOUNG. MAN HAS MANY © HAL HAs CHANCES, SAYS OIL PRESIDENT BY A. C. BEDFORD y | President Standard O11 Company ef whether New Jersey Forbes, Editor almost every I asked, “No, not a chance, but many he rep itedly Every fellow has coming his way constantly juestion of having chan omnizing chances when ne. You sometimes hear a fe ‘I had a chance once but di take it’ Never mind the chance that ls past; watch out for the next one and qualify to be able to seize Hedford, that fellow has a chance? not one chance chances,” chances it on but of they is not nay “You Delleve the young man of normal & moderate success of his lifer” 1 | queried. “Yes, emart brit T have no patience with Alecks, with highfiers, with ant young gentlemen who go Uke skyrockets, for they usually io dow like sticks,” he declared empha Do the natura jthing; do employer or petitor or cuts “Success after all, plain, every Just you are with what a a cunte labor, is ling with that very largely a m day morality reasonable an ner or & com. Avoid short | e*pectally LEAKNIN “A large majority firet ABOUT SEX of boys wet their permanent impressions befe wex from improper sources the 12. The sourc age of verage is ot age 9% are, The information almont in tably “The to wexual practice of 12 The above ideas thus gained often lead between the ages and 15 years is taken from the re pert of @ comprehensive survey among & group of college men, with a view of finding what part sex edu in the prevention of social diseases. Two things were established. Firat, that par ents fall to tell their ehtfldren what ey should know, the children learn t they should not know from # compan Second, that im- proper information one of the patest factors in the spread of #0 chal diseanes. In waging a nation-wide campaign for the er the U. 8. public health service learned that ignorance of the facts and a dis torted attitude on the part of the public are the first barriers to be re- moved. Parents and educators should realize that it is not possible today for children to grow up without learning about sex from some source. They should give children the bene- fit of wholesome knowledge suffici~- ent early in life to protect them from the dangerous ideas they are certain to get from older associates. Parents and teachers should write the “Information Editor,” U. 8. pub: lic health service, Washington, D. C., for useful information and instruc- tive Uterature. Ask for pamphlets D and F." tion might play where ne Q—Please advise me a good diet |for uric acid in the blood. A—It in not possible for this office to advine yougpecifically ax to a diet! |for uric acid trouble. In gene |quantity pf meats, eggs and other al |buminous products, and to omit such foods as liver and sweet breads. You should also drink nty of soft water and see that the t in rich in fruits and vegetables. | combined | |Be sure, however, to consult your) with tremendous industry and a de|Physician for specific directions. served for fairness “Read and study and think along| master of your business it i# al] about, what service |about other departments. | ntributes to making the world| you become familar with the whole| &round more comfortably and| process of manufacture. the habit of looking ahead, of acquiring nes £0 efficiently. foresight nation and reputa toward the other Cultivate possible, vision. fel Learn|learn all on for integrity and| lopen other doors. Or, if you start |in a manufacturing department, first that department and then there is to be learned Thus will “Your next step would be to much/learn the outlets and the uses for Have imagt- your manufacture—the market for your product. By studying what “Then try to pian out your Ufe,/and how much your market will intelligence and abnorma!l/to map out @ cou that |@iligence can usually make at least | calculate carry you the steps necessary toward your goal; to oO * consider and take, or will not take, you become & capable merchandise man. This double knowledge of manufacturing [forward step by step—and don't get/and merchandising qualifies you to your thing at a time. moment is book keeping fundam merely Main 2947 i SECOND AVENUE DOLLARS ARE STORED-UP. labor of men the same as coal is the storedup energy of the sun Mr. James J, Hill has said: “If you are not able to save money the als of accountancy- keep to thoroly and etudy your books the don't mechan- sequences mixed. Do one/fill an executive position and opens If your job at the|the way to rise keep books, master/whereas the fellow who was con- to the very top, tent to jog along i@ a rut in one department will still be about where he began.” 2 ation of social diseases, | FATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1920. ply Doesn't Worry Mexico; YY ALKS \D rrrank Crane COPYRIGHT |O2O BY FRANK CRANE THE SCHOOL REPUBLIC important events big with des are not often conspicuous, They be taking place in a small cor v a2 ner Imperial Rome ‘oing on in ‘The populace of cared little for what w Very few of them Yet there was the event that tof 1 the future Millio strutting in Ath- ens, people were talking of wars and nd art and literature. and few of them paid any attention to an old who being poisoned in prin Yet it was Socrates who taught the world The huge political conventions of Chicago and San Francisco will have y little effect upon the destiny of country. They are rather “the of timorous and flocking of it ren were man w birds Up in the thirty-cighth story of a New York skyscraper the other day a handful of people met to considel a wubject that weighed more in the than anything hinted al conventions of 40 scale of destin at in the politi years This little group was considering the question of the School Republic. At a meeting of the Congtitutional League in the Bankers’ club 70 chile dren from @ public school in Brook- lyn were demonstrating the labora- tory method of creating Democracy. ‘The idea is that Democracy is a thing that has to be learned. It does not come by nature. Therefore the place to begin is in the public school It is much more important that children learn how to govern them- selves, to obtain in lawful ways what the majority of them want, to select ir own governors and obey them, understand voting and take an in- terest, in politics, than that they learn how to bound Uruguay or do sums in arithmetic. The only radical cure for the ills of Democracy is more Democracy. | It is to understand, to feel, and be |expert in Democracy. As it is at present, children are trained in little autocracies, Thus 0 |be sure, it may be well to restrict the | When they graduate from | despise politics, | ‘The consequence ts that politics \falis into the hands of men who are second class both intellectually and | morally. The remedy is to teach Democracy from the very kindergarten, so that the children coming out of the school will be experts therein. ‘Then they will like politics, for we like what we know and we despise (that of which we are ignorant | Mr. Wilson L. Gill who is devot- jing his life to this idea, is a man whose name will be remembered a hundred years from now, when many who are today famous apostles of flapdoodle will be forgotten, Every school ought to be a Re public. School children should ¥ taught self government. school should be a little Un States, and not a little Germany, ‘The only reforms that are perma nent steps forward are those that be gin in the schoolroom. Humanity advances thru tts chil- dren, not thru {ts adults. Let's eat at Boldt's; cozy boxes for the whole family.—Advertisement. Main - CHERRY STREET seed of success is not in you.” 3 GUA ON Ts ga oguRe ihre an ALASKA BLDG Our Home Member Federal Reserve Bank. 947 DWWQVAAI|IT We F=>e_ mini N WS SSS The ability to save money is ® test of character. Are you able to deny yourself a pres ent pleasure for a future good? Can you keep your word to yourself? Can you be loyal to your ideals? Ninety-nine opportunities out of a hundred require money with which to grapple them. 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