The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1920, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR —By CONDO! The Seattle Star 2] IIMs Neco we seycone = FROM HERE IN “THIS CAR Ry mail, out of city, Se per month; # montha $1.50; @ montha 62.76) year, IN GXAcTLY TWo HOURS? 06.60, im the State of Washington Os of Whe wtata The per month, oe $4.39 for € montha oF $9.00 per year, By carrier, city, Ite per week. | Today's Best Bet: It's an even break; aces high and deuces low; Gamaliel or Middleton "10-18 | About all a guy needs these days to run for president is an obscure history and # highsounding middie name, The fool that eats until he is sick must fast till he is well_—Thorn- Mr. Marshall Slips ‘A Friend of Women " ‘The democrats pawed over the MWhen the storm and stress of the convention OM Daniel Defoe, who gave us Robinson Crusoe, whole party looking for a bird @ubsided, all loyal democrats will say: Our] must joice in his welldeserved celestial abode an unheardiof and as nobbily cog: Srty’n cause, our country’s good are safe in his | over the good news that there have Just been gradu eqcusintshd ‘tn Gainaiiel, ‘bet could ad ated » the profeasions about 5,000 Amert not find him Mont the Shia remarked Vice President Marshall the morn-| + Nosides being a great roman Defoe waa a pro Bouthern delegates are named after James M. Cox was nominated gressive thinker of the first order and he bad many such commonplace names as . | th oO onservatives of his time who id George Washington Somebody. i ty’s cause, our country’s a@ tilt with the conservativ ¢ his t ho sal : Sur party's cause, © y e a lttle knowledge was o dangerous thing for a or Abraham Lincoln Something: Biieven #0 experienced a man in public affairs as) © else. Bo the democrate did the next best thing and picked J, Middle- ton Cox. asion of party wel | | I have thought of ft as one of the moat bar in the world, that we deny the learning to women,” 4 Defoe in ell into the 1 allows himself an ex ahead of the country’s good. "OE course, Mr. Marshall will deny he meant that | ty comes first And he would be entirely Rhe denial. Nor is Mr. Marshall's an of putting party before country by car Hon. We say careless expression? Perhaps that barous cust advantages the 1 century, casting thus a bomt eee Mbidleton is one letter longer than! Gamaliel, But the one glaring fault with Middleton is that it is pro- nounced just like it looks, unlike Gamaliel, which ain't Gamaliel, His is the t recorded adm! Mion by any man that women are mentally as competent aa men and ergitied to education ime it. But if we weren't given to so pr h | eaually lavishniess, this locecness of expression ¥ He ox that women spend thelr youth we'll aay, has Middleton skint seven * a learning “to stitch or sew, or make baubles” And aie tam thé tack, being prompunc rarity. We devote so much energy to 1 F aeaty @ivietena to the fetish that one party, | he asked: “What ie @ man good for that le taught ed Gamawaliel, like that. Judging - no more by names, we predict a sweeping deserves “loy meaning lifelong suppc of who its candidates are, that it tant at ing we think of country welfare only as an aught. the trouble with pollth parties, It mean yellow dog on “ee woman plague us with her folly and tm: pertinence? Why did we not let her learn, that ahe might have more wit? not believe that God Almighty ever made no delicate, so glorious creatures * ¢ ¢ able of the same accomplishments with to be only stewards of our houses and victory for Gamaliel oe If Middleton's folks had only had the sense to call him Montmorency! ns who are “loyal are apt to vote ticket, whether the We pereetve that both candidates have been printers and reporters, men, fs best served thereby or not. pa H t ve eb Bi a | Ree te and are at present publishers. We ee 7 Wnen MEN and thelr principl He made the revolutionary proposal that an can forgive them for being printers, than nar rant parts Bominate our political affairs re Blind, vague, unintelligent and | can sympathize with them for being reporters, but, as publishers, we can't vote for either one of them. owe academy for women be opened in London and was hooted down as a radical. His was the first declaration of Independence for women and when woman's suffrage wins tie > . 36th state, the author of, Robinsoe Crusoe deserves a oheate telephone service is reported t0| front woat among those who are entitled to some of ible” because patrons can't get cen-| wo credit for the emancip, I. /Beatticites will know how to sympa- with Vienna. McAdoo announces he is relieved and delighted that he wasn't nomi- nated. That makes two of us. eee Middleton burst into tears when informed the democrats had picked him. Two of us, again. eee Many Mezicans have attained the presi- dency, but they never reach the goal of the Limit Armaments || ex-presidency.—Washington Post. Hoover recalls to the world it has for. The Bawls Delay Middleton Is the pick of the party;/ Bryan came near being the shovel. eee You don't hear so much about Free Love since mush went to 15 | conts a package. | = all about limitation of armaments. He urees | |, fundamental condition of ending future wars be | ee meee et tent, new ware) 4 warrant for the arrest of Edward Masterean of ‘cont cm four. ” rea pew controt the | Marlon, Ky. was sworn out May 11, 1878 | dock te tire MT Cte aanagctnt. They are the | ne TOD Sorueed cf “pining bell” Blue law Pyorrhea is an infeetion of the eo. e. cornea pol ney are the | . L stuff! gums or toothsocketa, It begins be w ‘ er « a oe} i =, Me 2 - oe py hg Fran: a. Japan. The | <nt wasn't served then; Ed was too hard | KOSYASHT eto sy? neath the edges of the guma that plese ond We: an vaste ot ee aged bed rhage Sarenee SP 8 vant Hi But the other day, somebody found the! 4. sts oe a state iten [MAY® been injured and espectally | where and ing urged Ly Jingo agitators to ch <i iea iph ninate of a state prison Writes | wiere there has been an accumula ce ae all comers at naval conntruction. Great | ““riiy rather lengthy delay wasn't bad for Edwant.|me that he is to take part in a de |tion of tartar or Ilmedeposit. As! Mary Smith ¢ With Miss Ma. bas wor gall dng down new wii vessels, but | Gave him considerable time to prepare a defense.|bate on the subject: “Resolved,| the infection progresses and destroys] wore a sensible} re Smythe it Maistrees of the seas. France contitities con But how about other delays of the la For] That America ix hypocritical and|the membranes that attach the root! snoa None of { was different m +im her army, and militarists partly cot | C | instance: of the tooth to the mocket, a pocket | ‘ 4 : te eric teers, tho : her international policies. Japan still separates Moat criminal courts are preparing to adjourn for! peared aan sf Paks 5 oe aie phn is formed around the root, and the | "oe, high heel Ghe couldn't! Parmy and navy from her system of partiamen- | tne qunwier. Judges fecl the heed for three-month | tie vente me te ewe him some) ‘ow becomes loosened. It in mid tightly fitting } wash dishes be-| overnment and keeps them in autocratic readi- | vacations. Must get away to the cooler summer re that this dineane is responsible for| "hors for Mary. ) -aune that spoiled |ideas upon the subject. |far mor@ions of teeth than is decay.| Th*Y AF ®R't the whiteness of four nations can adopt a policy of limits | "An winter long they've been aitting on the tench| 7°, “rdinary. sane = minds. of) nu? thie is not the only evil. In| FOOd for the feet, } her hands | for ‘any opening. | place. to woods, camp, pool, mountain j Farmaments and compel the other countries to | four or five hours every day, tiresome life, wearying, |Our. ‘he very , statement Of (Dine pocket pus is continually being | *"¢ ##i4- Often Marie thelg example. Before the war, Germany| grinding. So the vacation auestion ie a pwure. americans are {formed and discharged into the wore one too! te be 4 an_ internation: 1 agree | Which will leave in jails many men, women and) not pypocrites, profiteers, nor eapit- | meuth and mwallowed. Also, aa the many coats of| Himiting the growth of the world's armies ayd | oven children, accused of misdoings. Accused, mind! sists. Neither are they saints and | eth ise and fall in thetr diseased paint upon her a yp dng y aba ag portimre — vcr you, not convicted. Most of them are acquitted, gunday schoo! superintendenta, sockets in ordinary chewing, bac face, ‘and while oon out difficulty. records show. But during the long hot months! hey are human beings, teria are forced into the circulation the used to be a} : ir governments approach the matter. with | they must stay in jail that judges may have @ good] Ay such they will run good and|*?4 may be carried to distant parts, blond now she iy sSapsepenid hoon repay can be brought to | time bad) the same as the nvernge scope | "bere they work harm according to has the loveliest dere is an international policy which means | That picture af the law's delay tm't pleasing. |of human beings in any other coun-|(helr nature, selecting Uswues for brown hair. Mut Daiiats ‘ekeegt: the araitines mak in | to it try. Perhaps @ little better. thelr operation in which they can| And Mary was} Marie wears j@ United States is the most powerful Ermey ‘The average American is honest | Dest Uirive. very sensible in} the niftiert filmy worid. Therefore, it is for this country to invite : le and wants to do the fair thing. Pre | It Waa formerty supposed that the |other ways, too. { frocks, and she eit aumhecleth, or eit 06 Sete the. It is hardly reasonable to call them pleas-|ciseiy as the average woman every-| Ml effects from such conditions as| She never) quit three jobs iA debe .the. tonne: there, easue | ure cars when the mortgage on the house| where is decent. dental abscenses and other pus foci | painted her face, } because it does falls due. ‘The email mind when it gete over| Were wholly due to the toxins or/nor dyed her} muss up one's heated in apt to read tts own ideas | Polsonous products thrown into the|hair, nor put $clothes eo to into the world. The man who has| bloodstream by the bacteria at the|/beauty patches) have to avork everlasting peace will come when | heen betraved by & woman thinks| focus. It t# known, however, that] on her cheek. ‘round ar old of- earth is held by nations strong | In the Future ” all women treacherous. If he has|the bacteria migrate into outaide tis | Mary would not } flee, to defend their share. llbeen swindled by a church member,|#ues thru the blood and lymph-| wear a lowneck-? Anyhow, Marie —-——-},. jumpe to the conclusion that all/#treama, In Joint affections, they |ed dreas in win § can't get to work | “The worst In yet to come.” chureh members are rascals. If he| Clog and obstruct the small blood.jter and take don time in the » by an em-| Veanels, interfering with the nutri-| chances catching { morning because | They've been saying that a long, long while now.|has been browbes tion of the joint-tismues, causing de-|Cold. And #he § she has to be out | And the prediction has made good, time and again.| ployer, he concludes that all em » Probably, then, {t is @ mistake to suppose that|ployers are tyrants. If he has been|formity and enlargement, as in ar wouldn't Wear ? so late with her “the worst has arrived” in the shape of a fashion| overcharged by a grocer, he aa-|thritis deformans, as well ax in|fure in summer, § parties and her note from Paris—Velvet knickerbockers for men,.”|Sumes that all grocers are thieves. |acute inflammation, such as rheu-}®24 get over } dances, know it all.” He in the executive who is not | It may be entirely possible for Parisian garment| This is not logic. It is a mild| ‘Matic fever. Indeed, this condition | Wii™ Last winter she of gathering about him a staff of brainy | architects to design something funnier than a pair | and common form of insanity | of subinfection, or “focal infection,”| Mary never) aught a cold be-| fhers, some of whom know, perhaps, better than | of velvet knickers for grownup men, and, doubtieas,| Another staternent in the resotu-| ts coming to be recognized as a far emo cause she insist. ica is for the| more important cause of disease than | The absurdity of! the time-honored auto-intoxication, a| thought it was thous tam ome heaithier to get to sleep early. stockings and Mary didn’t (hat low-necked | || dress in the cold: | |} wear her party frocks to work, est of weather. because, as she$ And this sum. raid, a girl can't? mer she made keep her mind on ¢ her old man buy her job if she's her a new fur gotiton her Piece to wear. dress. having perpetrated the knickers they m: be en-jtion ts th couraged to greater effort. Bear that in mind when | “pital Die is the one who allows his subordinates to| first you gaze upon the city’s leading banker, or|this, of course, ts apparent to the | term which has been greatly abused out the detalis—and mark ye, for this is the | the mayor, or the judge praneing down to his dally ;*¥eT™se Person. and misused. = mt point—and gives them credit, private and | toll clad in nifty knickerbockers of baby blue| For thos who are below the aver | agile for s0 doing. wehiel. age, it may be stated that the| @Q My nose ts always cold, and © He 1s the big man, the man of broad vision, The worst will be on Ite way, and that worst|thing called “capitalism” is a good) when it gets warm it gets red. Is , ‘will remain cool and collected thru any period | will merely pave the path for still another “worst,” | 2a! of @ bugaboo, |there anything I can do to remedy ‘Gepression, or financial setback, that may come. | For the worst has the habit of always being “yet ne capital of the United States in| the trouble? iiiieis. bim. It is hard to do. rips SP weed by @ few rich men. It| A. This sounds like a simple re * « made up of the savings of very|quest, but experience has shown many men in moderate circum-|that the condition ts usually one how to rus the business, or government, of ‘ . : ? stances, which responds very Uttle to treat- er, seenice ‘pricks are Srp bang _ No census report can possible make Mare} evita: te a blessing. Without it/ment. It is suggested that you try| And Mary nev: Phe e ing B pesos for Villa's | ion, Ohio, look as large as it is feeling just) tnere could be no civilization The|to fmprove the tone of the blood| *F had as much Ht} ‘ now.—New York Evening Sun. object of thrift is to make capital.|vegsols by applying very hot and| time for the boys ty The aim of every working man|very cold applications, rapidly alter-|2% She did for 1 | | 3 should be to Become a et pihallie joating. helping her moth- THE BOYS IN THE OTHER CAR kag ar gel B lo aha “yen indeed, Iput Yes, indeed, | eA Hy Mary was a very Wy pial, ave well Editor’s Mail [/foca’nin: very very healthy man ts al sane and sensi. And the shoes! |! {Ii earn more than he consumes. If cad all that, ¢she wears! Why, ] he saves his surplus and maker it RECORD OF LYNCHING dpbers | f . 2 ? 2 Every fellow } ny son's mother | || | HELLO > nee for pi’ raat . rae be Editor, The Star: I send you the] gaid so. “ knows Marie can | |) |/i] ¢ jit is this surplus th es the! following information concerning| And a lot of ) never keep house IS THIS MARS prosperity of the country , These lynchings for the first ax montha of] mothers of ona } If shoes like that | WELL SAY - AH n charge of the finances of great) this year. I find according to the|said Mary would But all the boys i eS business sometimes do wrong, but.|reconia kept by the ; ¥ SEE IF YOU CAN su File,. ther, Are quite as wtralgt,| joo rasated te unurer tc ec ene heen wae Siumnen eerteed er rte) ones 4 as publiominded as and Research of the Tuske-/for some man, § that Marie looks Get CENTRAL eee we ; geo Institute, Monroe N. Work in|but their son $ like a million dol N HERE ON eee Pligg works for thre’) charge, that there have been in the| didn't seem to ?lars when she's cow oe first six months of 1920, 12 lynch-|take strong to § on parade, which EARTH Perhaps more #9. For thelr po-l ings, ‘This ix 17 less than the num- mother’s advice. is often. FOR ME— sition and their responsibilities en-| ber, 29, for the first six months of eee 1] > able them to see better the advan-/ 1919, and 33 leas than the number, LIARS WE HAVE HEARD | tages of co-operation 45, for the first six months of 1918.) “Humph! This Babe Ruth ain't no In conclusion, it may be stated All of those lynched were negroes.|pall player. Why, once when I was that in all probability the inmates) mignt of those put to death were|in my true form I never got up to of the state prison are very hp charged with the crime of rape. bat but what I didn’t hit a home run like the people of the outalde Some} The states in which lynchings oc-/Once I knocked the pill so high that are bad and some are go0¢ curred and the number in each state| when it came down it had snow on as follows: Alabama 2, Florida 1,}it. I didn’t always put them over Georgia 2, Kentucky 1, Kansas 1,/the fence, I put them thru the Minnesota 3, South Carolina 1, Tex-|fence, I used to get a price from the ae t Yours very truly, |kids to knock holes in the fence 80 Principal Tuskegee Normal and In*)they could watch the game.” dustrial Institute, Alabama, “why is it you aren't in the Serer hoe ee leagues now?” "Them spit balls queered mo, Ev- ery time I hit one it flew over the| town where wo were playin’ and ev- erybody caught a disease from the germs that fell off, It was unhealthy After you eat—always use|fer me to play so T quit the game and saved a lot of lives.” “Why don't you go back? They have done away with the spitball?” Seats Now Selling FOR CONCERT OF PAULIST CHOIR At the Arena on Monday, July 12 70—VOICES—70 Under Direction of FATHER There are more than 2,000,000 members of the Masonic order in the United States and Canada, “They won't let me corhe back. After they figured how many boards one or two tableta—eat like candy, |I had knocked off the fence an’ how Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated | many bats I had broken they decid- Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, ed that it was cheaper to lose the | food souring, repeating, headache: pennant.” we John the many miseries caused by betebt Re ‘enor, of St. 4 z . e ‘Two bakers spoil the bread. Both Cathedral, N York City, Acid-Stomach of them want to do the loafing. as Soloist, pith ci basBhaktovr ce BATONID Wade andvucentonten, SOME SPEED oy ¢ harmful acids and gases tout |* Prices 55c, $1.10, $1.65, || of the body and, of course, you get|gucnaine big, mew antomoniies | $2.20, including war tax. well, Tens of thousands wonderfully | wot, Speeder claims it was his dist fils at A sine apa hy lpr Digit had automobile that struck the light-| § Sale a rena joney Fi rn y own drags | ning."-—-Boston Transcript. Box Office ase try itt —_ lumbia Colo, the new American Columbia Colo is better. beer.—Adv, — MEDAY, JOLY 7, 1920. Morning Song BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE O, sing me a song of the morning, A song of the dulcet day, A song of the whiteness warning The whimpering stars away, For the Night is banned and banished And his dusky guards are vanished, And his widowed mtoon Lies all a-swoon, And her weazened face is gray. O, sing me a song of the morning, Where the sun-god spreads his feast, And he smi on the world, unscorning The loftiest or the least. And Himalaya shouts his glory And the dewdrop tells his story And the jeweled notes Of a thousand throats Are flung to the Shining East! (Copyright, 1920, N. BE. A) From the hotel terrace between dances you choose the peak whose secrets you will learn next day. Starting while the morning air still nips, by noon you reach great panoramas in the le 5 . Canadian Pacific Rockies Scenery and appetite grow here together. The clear Alpine air does it. It gives zest to everything you f or fishing brook trout, tennis or camera hunting, pony riding or swimming in warm sulphur pools, going your first climb alone at swift be- ginner’s pace or following a Swiss guide slowly over some glacier’s age-old surface. Full information furnished on application to E. F. L. Sturdee, General Agent, Passenger Dept. Canadian Pacific Railway 608 Second Avenue, Seattle. Telepone: Main 5588 Reservations Now for September All funds are invested only in First’ i Mortgages on Improved Real Estate | and in City, State and Government Bonds—as required by the Strict State Laws which govern. ‘ Our investments are also made only upon the Business Judgment and with the Approval of } the following Officers and Representative | Board of Directors: | A.F. ANDERSON, CORWIN S.: SHANK Provident Counse? | if c Director Ne fro Bank 10.3 ny ADOLPHF.LINDEN Gotnmus vanes Vice-Pres.- Treasurer. National Benk of Commerce E.W.CAMPBELL, __E. L. GRONDAHL, ) Vice-Pree.- Secretary President of State Bank of Seatde FREDA. ANDERSON 7 ; peel hor aidand All. Funds left here_on or before Thursday, Say 15th, wal Earn Ful So Month's Dividengs on ember 3st. For Nineteen years we have never paid less than 5% per annum. Br If 0H are interested in a Plan For Saving that will bring you Regular Dividends, together with Safety and Security, call at our convenient-location. Resources Over Four Million Dollars Puget Sound Savings & Loan #ssociation Where Pike Street Crosses Third weexras0

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