The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 28, 1920, Page 6

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he Seattle Star oo per month; if Washington, of 09.00 per "The greater man, the greater courtesy. Bb. nd Poland’s Failure fs America’s duty M™ friendship to warn T the disastrous imperialiam of her & Whenever there ts excitement in it fs usually because another Polish adven im militarism is afoot. Poland is becoming the Prussia of Europe. Domineering saber ratiting to be the ambition of her most conspicuous men. has long sympathined the insistence of this country’s representatives the peace conference that gained for Poland her : port entry at Danzig. Without America’s Poland would still be partitioned among Russa, Austro-Hungary. Free Poland has imagination. But, America cannot the Germaniszed spirit which has grown p Warsaw since the Poles were given their inde it. with Poland. It latest of Poland's mad adventures is ending ly. The belief of the Polish army that successfully invade a after the NR powers had failed to destroy Ruswia’s military strength, has met failure. After a spectacular dash nd the capture of Kieff, the Ukrainian the Poles have had to abandon the city and toward their own territory Are reported to have committed many acts ism, including the destruction of the Kieft Whether or not reports of savagery are there was never any legitimate reason for the campaign. It was purely a raid for more and power, It has atill further delayed ing of Iuussia’s grain ports to the world. It Meediessly added to the suffering of eastern Russ Sugar * cost of be the administration can reduce between now and November, there won't democratic votes to be counted.” Speaks the sapient housewife. miay be dear, but a suit lasts a year, it may be excessive, but it is paid once a month. may be expensive, but one may leave the in its stall. sugar! can make the citizen believe that sugar is four to six times its pre-war price? can calculate the irritation of the daily sold as a fuvor? can allay the suspicion that sugar at nine twenty-three, twenty-seven and thirty cents in game market on the same day is sold at a dis valuation”? ’ @emocratic party Is “in power.” A democratic state is the chief benefictary. @emocratic people is disgusted SAM the rage against profiteering bids falr to con- a on sugar, @ttic salt, no modern pep can save the situation. but an adequate supply of sugar at a Price. leas that is accomplished, the-price-of.a.pound of is the unspoken issue. ‘will determine the fate of the league. “will rewrite the tariff and taxation laws. ‘will set the course of the republic for a decade the destiny of the world, perhaps, for a genera dole "The clothing profiteer will survive until outgrow the desire to dress as well neighbor. Edwards can’t supply a plank for the he might be satisfied to furnish a | Campaign expenses will not be complete tnless they include Penrose’s long distance one bill. | The Old Guard dies, but never surrenders » to modern ideas of progress. The republican platform recognizes the | e of oil wells in Mezico. a ies have nuts, but only the G. 0. P. A is to bolts. Wood has uniform luck in being kept ont fights. | The world is really growing better if one Published Dafty by The Star Publishing Oo, 2 months, Phone Mata Outside year. y onthe, 62.78; f the state, By carrier, city, Tennyson. | Tragedy of Old Age | Reautiful women think of olf age as thelr worst enemy. Some face it open-eyed, knowing that the only beauty which can be retained ts spiritual, to inevitable which 1# themselves, refuse its Others, deceiving only and youth inroads, of time's cruel that beauty recognize | victory over physical is openeyed, as she published in Berlin about a Princess Pauline Matternich shows in her memoira, recently book paragraphs woman of the other, a once famous beauty: he had forgotten that she was growing old and still pictured herself as the admired beauty of a past ger om. All her beauty had vanished. The marvelous curls had tapered dowe to five or seven yel hairs. Her, skin resembisd the rind of a} lemon, Her body, for one could see a great deal of it, was a doddering skeleton, The poor princens| | had seantily clothed herself in a kind of shirt of white batiste, held together by two flimsy rose scarfs. ‘That was all | “On the poor old weatherbeaten head was perched | a hat which @ youthful shepherdeas would have | hesitated to wear, Thus attired, if one could call her attired, she came to visit my grandfather, The | poor thing sidied up to him and gave him aidelong, | languishing glances, Poor, tragic mummy beside the stately old diplomat, looking at him eagerly with | faded, Her contains these | w | colored blue eyes.” None but an Intelligent woman who understands the tragedy of age, could have written so caustic | an indictment of @ vanity that is as stupid as it is pitiable! It seems odd that the party out of power| is the only one that ba knows how a situa- tion should be handled, THE Rest please, What Net number please 1 am ringing them, Waiting? I am ringing them. Just a moment, please? What number did you call please? ‘Thank you, 1 am ringing them, Iam ringing them, Did et ur party yet? 1 will ring them again. What number did you call, please? Thank you, Waiting The line ts busy, Chief op Just a moment please, Chief o or will answer in just a moi Waiting? Waiting? Chief will answer in just a moment in chief operator; what Is it, please? Just a moment, p What ber was it, please? What please? Just a moment, “Number. you num prefix please | There is no such number.” Oh, nothing, except that you've been trying to get your own home and have been calling the same num ber you have called every day for years—with about the same result every year . neven, . Reporter wrote a story about a cow running amuck In the streets Printer maid it sounded to him like bull. ° . Marriage ts a tonic. You take it for better and get worse. eee Contractors build the houses on the installment plan these days That's why they call them bun gleO'a . At the high price of baseballs a player doesn't try to knock one over the fence. He tries to get one and take it to @ “fence.” eee IDITORIAL A horse is a animule mounted on four legs. It has teeth and chews its own food. A horse has never been known to be very talkative, || Fact is they don't communteate with Mexico Unruffled In some minds {it was believed the republican platform would rub the Mexican fur in the wrong | direction; that the possibility of @ republican election victory might widen the breach between this coun-| try and the repubile south of the Rio Grande. If the breach is widened, the widening, it appearn, must be done by those who live north of the border President Huerta’s eyes, “Mr. Harding ts . power behind the Maxica " republican policy in the last analynia, n gov. toward by ernment, believes Mexico will be dictate American public opinion, and I am confident the American people desire to live in peace with Mexico.” | It im to be hoped Gen. Obregon's prediction t# verified, that the people, not the party, will dictate! this nation’s policy toward a sister republic. While pondering upon this, it is no waste of time to note these expressions of Mexican good feeling toward an American party which numbers among its leaders that fiery, waratany-cost Senator Fall, of New Mexico. Now that Bolshevism has turned to com-| pulsory labor, the reactionaries are beginning | to see some good in it after all Can’t hope to put government on a sound basis while so much energy is wasted in horn tooting. After a convention they tear down the decorations, but they keep the platform until the day after election. | 5 It is a question which will be reached first, the limit of human greed or the limit of hu-| man gullibility. star Seattle ball team evidently doesn't know that. Well, the theory that any republican could | be elected will be put to the severest test, A man has the best of it. He doesn’t have to sweat thru three coats of powder, The G. O. P. plank concerning the league | is sadly in need of interpretations. In these dry times a candidate can raise a dust without mud-throwing. _ doesn’t count politics. on the Canadian Pacific Railway you follow ‘ Bighesy bait mi . built a million years ago. For all the way through The Canadian Pacific Rockies Calgary your train trails one waterway after al guest on the trains Glacier, Lake Louise, Bari, Calgary, is, Glacier, Lake Louise, , Calga and eastward, Full information furnished on application to wre E. F. L. Sturdoo, General Ageat, Passenger Deyt., Conadian Pacific Railway from Vancouver to (Gad ot the Conadion Pons Totes & toria, Vancouver, ‘er ving (000 Scand Ave., Seattle. Telephone: Main 5588 Sr Tout —<F <A — ~-en)} => — CHARLES SCHWARTZ Optometrist and Mfg. Optician Byes Examined and Pree: Prices Reasonable. Phone Main 26 Proper Thing Now Is to Peel Off Soiled Skin Those who abhor sticky, greasy shiny, streaked complexions should Higiously avoid powders nature's. have become known. } perspiration will prod dence that you've been a wax. As it is applied at bedtime and washed off in the morning, the Plexion never looka ifke a make- | Mercolized wax gradually taken f a bad complexion, 4natead of add & anything to make it worse. It has none conmeticn much | more in keeping the complexion | beautifully white, aatiny and youth ful, free” from ‘freckies, pimples, blotches and other blemishes, Just get an ounce of it at your druggists and see what a few days’ treatment will do. Une like cream, inhen a order to introdu Ce strongest plate known, covers very little the you can bite corn off the cob; guaran- toed 15 years. years, have impreasion taken in the yy. Kxamtnation and advice free. Our Plate and Bridge Work. We Stand the e is recommended by ov: ving 004 satisfaction Present patr jo atti hen coming to right place. Bring this ad with you. Open Gendays Prom © te 13 ter Working OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS Sgpesits Vanoer-l'atersen Ut» ENTISTS jee our new (whalebone) plate, which Is the lightest Adler-i-ka_ Again! “Adlertka has entifely CURED my constipation. I took ONLY one half bottle and have not taken any since,” (Signed.) A. 8. Eaton, Adlerd-ka flushes BOTH upper and lower bowel .so completely it ofte: CURES constipation, Relieves AN c ga8 on stomach or sour stom. jach, Removes a surprising amount of foul, decayipg matter from the alimentary Ml (which poisoned stomachs for” months). Prevents appendicitis, The INSTANT pleasant action of Adler-i-ka astonishes both doctors and patients, It is a mixture of bugkthorn, cascara, glycerine and nine other simple ingredients. Swift Drug Co., Bartell Drug Co, and all leading druggists roof of the mouth; Ask our our office, be sure People It isn’t every cellar that is exhilarating. |"* cir mouth, They with Geir rear Horses used to be a wonderful way of treating your enemies. This was done by trading. You would get their goat unless they traded you a worse horse than you had in the first place, A horse is a thing of the past; even a Ford will pass them, that ls if they are standing still and the Ford's in a burry to get to the feed box. A horse is a good thing to lay your money on if you desire to be rid of it The best place to lay money on a horse in at a race track, It is ro mored that » millionodd men have lost their fortunes on the horse race. Hf millions of these old sports lost, there must have been millions of others that won. ‘The only way you can get a kick this dry weather is by a horse, The doctor won't write » prescription un- leas you have something to show your sickness besides your tongus. For tongues lie in the mouth and all around it, eee Fashion t baring » lot of truth about the women's backs. eee You never can tell how much good there is in a hard-bolied egg. eee The bungieowes they build these days are sure lazy lookin’. are even putting sleeping porches on A Gollar sure looks spent when it's broken. . ee ‘The belle of the town has general. ly « costly ring. 88 LIARS WE HAVE MET Whore the goat “Yah know our goat used to give canned milk before she took a liking newspapers. “You don't say? How did that ef. |fect_bim?* “What's ahe doin’ now—layin’ bets or giving campaign speeches!” “No, she's giving grape juicn” Let's eat at Boldt's: cozy boxes for y —Advertinement. The Sure Way To Suc Is to be systematic with your ‘Savings, by leaving something from your pay envelope regularly in’ this Strong Financial Institution. Begin to Save Today and Start on the Road to Place part of your earnings in this Strong Savings Association where they will Earn profitable dividend SEATTLE STAR VERET1 “Of Blessed Memory” ‘Of blessed memory.” the ol * the old Referring to some prince wh Soghe monarch, moldering wi “Of blessed memory “Of blemed memory™ We, who have heard the fad To nothingness A yur hearts againnt “Of bleased We fold ow Of half-forg Biown by some perfumed bre nds and hark ten me “Of blensed memory™ These not vapors Hut have some sub With that soul are ance of ace born te Of blessed memory ™ Those whom we may Our hurt heart aches The bleemd memory of thone (Copyright, 1 not #u: |His Picture, She Says, Flattered Kinsoki Utruncmtya, a Jap sawmill | worker, fooled hin wife, Himno, when | he wooed her in Japan. Kinsok! sent | Hisano a picture’of a regular John | Drew, and the little Hisano in far joff Nippon fell for him strong She came to Seattle a picture bride, but | family difficulties entered the house pb © Calvin 8 Hall denied the to § motion for a ne firming ¢ | vorce two weeks | that Amer ognize marriages baw ture proceas. an cour don the pic FUNERAL SERVICES for Mre Serah Beals, resident of Washington for 30 years, were held Sunday after noon at the U ty Undertaking parlora Burial will be today at Burlington. If you value your watch, let Haynes repair ft, Next to Liberty Theatre, Co. cess— Success returns. an Resources Now Over Four Million Dollars SS Puget Sound Savings and Loan Association Where Pike Street Crosses Third | | memory! for now, at but car ARTE AU KNOW ABOUT THE DANGER OF TH ROLLER TOWGL I HAROUWY Exe PECT TO FIND ONS BTILK 4 book maid; prayers read one breath had fied, th the anclent dead So may we all, ng footateps fall adown the Outer Hall the lent Wall timen, to whispered chimes rdies and rimen, eze from faroftf climea, For, an it seems shot with rain gleams & wort which teems 0 us of dreams. And no abide mmon to our aide. not be denied ho died. 920, N. BE. A) f | Dr. Frank Crane COPYRIGHT \OLO BY FRAtIR ¢ 1S VIOLENCE Way mes ha Hayne th the Rane THK i aby our? of of Jowus Holme the course has glimpsed this aw as it were Jehovah aa Moses nder parts of He st in menacin a vast and labor as a wl world regar an romewhat and great cause the wide a class battle. tenths of the tea the vi prob- It fe Jon ¢ world that * | he e| If you are laborers and Id be fair if they would * be human Jown and t the ancient get flap-doodle lane to class, nobody ¢ but to destruct miracles are ence is true cannot oppoxitior ever got man worked easily « of the f it cannot kill reform and kick army musket, r truth proof atop an an to harm has more abundant historica “] that take the » by the sword.” Holmes postolic that violence is a of class t ng & government two artificial classes, or political par ties, is the most wasteful and stupid thing imaginabie. Trying to come to an industrial understanding by the whoop-la of labor agitators on the one hand and its user ey foul by by la vicious effort to suppress opinion |Larsen Plane Sets |New Nonstop Record PHILADELPHIA, June 28.~ Breaking records for a nonstop, Might in America, the Larsen air- plane was foreed to land yesterday, only a few miles short of its ob-| jective. The plane flew from Omaha to Pine Valley, near here, a distance of over 1,400 miles. The flight con- med ie lese than 11 hours. Beantifal PRIZMA Colored Scenic “The Riviera” on the qther is about as bad, Men don’t hate each other. They hate each other's class. They don't shoot at each other, they shoot at each other’y uniforms, Men don't fight by natura, They tend to cooperate, They are nat- urally friendly. It ts only the 4 {I's invention of sets, cliques, races partios, sects, and the other vari ants of class mania, that make man “ such fantastic tricks be fore as ware, relig race riots | petent health org: whole | his town, city sword | MONDAY, JUN 28, 1920. IME HEALTH OFFICIALS war and since, with of thousands of been aken towns, and regarding the protec public health, The men military service had for the and sapl vULL-T During the the coming has cities, home there various tier, an in communities tion of the ho were ir opportunities of sanitation sn population in the immediately adjacent to the 4s military encampments wit ed dem the United pub contro) and eradication of communi » diseases and insanitary condi The public in beginning to realize town, or county can be conditions and if the proper matters is main- ned by the health authorities. Proper sewage disposal, clean wae ter, safe milk, controb of communt- diseas eradication of flies mosquitoes, @ possible if town or community has @ com- ization. A health officer who properly pro tects and safeguards the health of or county must de vote his whole time to his work. Full-time health officers are neces |sary for efficient public-health work. | But the health officer alone can- not do all the work; he must have @ |laboratory, public-health nurses, anitary inspectors, and necessary clerical help. The entire working force of any health department, city, town or county, should give their full time to the work. It sounds expensive, t sort of investment for any com- nity, for w ected public Ith work pays big dividends. ested send for a | stim pamphiet entitied, “Is Your Community Fit?" Sent free of charge by addressing the Informa- tion Editor, United States Public Health Service, Washingfon, D. C, ANSWERED | Q Pease tell me of a sure and effective way to remove hair from the fi I have used some hair re- movers and they make the hair |grow worse. I want something to kill the roots of the hair. A. The only way to remove hair from the face permanently is by det stroying the root from which the | hair grows. This is best done by the lytic method, by means of the needle. This treatment is r painful and it requires to be by an experienced operator. Ordinary remedies do no more than |remove the surface growth of the hair. that a city, freed of insanitary preventable dis pervision of such and the but it is the ting done Mra. Jouette A, Singleton, of St. Paul, Minn. asks for divorce be- cause her husband “played the sweetest strains on his violin for the entertainment of other women.” trikes, ‘There's @ Geal that ts sound ff this book, and perhaps after all will reach the unbalanced ( comprise the larger part of the pop | ulation) the better for being’ tainted with class insanity. If the gospel is too pure they | won't listen. | Said Ro L. Stevenson, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but also “Lat's go to the Liberty” is always good advice Dum da da dum, tee da diddle dum tee dum! Neilan’s big six-act First National mirthquake is here, playing to capacity audiences— That means Marshall “It must be tough to have two wives you are unable to recall | don't ever mar And all those who have disobeyed this warning are hereby summoned to appear and show cause. Bring your own — we do the uncorking— cases called in order. Come on in and see an electrician spark his way into a secret marriage by short-circuiting a non-conductor. Matinees, a 25. After 6:30, 35c. Children, llc any time. All prices include tax, pos ?

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