The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 10, 1920, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR —By CONDO! EVERETT TRUE (EENTCEMAN WME Geeica \TO $G6 NOU, MISTER TRUE, | Hewe's MIS CARD. he Seattle Star out of city, Se per month: # months, $1.60; @ months, 62.76) year the State of Washington, Outside of the stata Tho per month, @ montha, of $9.00 per year, By carrier, city, pr Service Well Rendered 1 * .Totny'’s Rent Tet: near the bathing beach binoculars, | Kee | OVERHEARD AT LUNCHEON “Went up to a place last night and the lady came to the door and said, ‘You shouldn't come around here looking for anything to drink It’s wll gone. We just drank up six gallons, Come back tomorrow; we'll| have 10 gallon# more that I brewed! A shady nook with the GASTROPTOSIS A correspondent who writes that she has been told #he haa falling of the stomach, anka whether the condl~ tion ts serious and whether it can be cured, A watietactory explanation of the nature and cause of “gastroptosia,” 4g the condition im termed, has not yet been discovered. ‘The condition is three times more frequent among COPYRIGHT 1920 BY FRANK CRANE are After the close of each seaston of congress the peopte of the country begin to find out a few things that songreas has done to them, Sometimes the process is longer than at others. A good many things they | do not find out sometimes until years after—as, for instance, that the Lever act made a strike of coal of honor and crosses of war little lexcept when they are won by great services nding heroism. y H. C, Henry, a Seattle banker, was deco Swith the cross of the Legion of Honor for es on behalf of the fatherless children of THE MAN THAT WOMEN VOT ERS WANT FOR PR ENT A lady fr Oklahoma writes me describing what kind of a man she thinks the women voters want for miners iMegal. today. Viease mister, will you belp | One opin other, . omen than amor on, five yea n worked with his But one thing that has appeared already te the Poe eager y ary thie cue to |™2 UD.’ yyy ridin abr po bagpn tir without. | na sou! to Mr. Henry ve for the main. | fact that congress alipped one over tn, the closing tell what it seoms to me the women| 2 °l! Gown? Don't tel met producing any aymptems, In other } soul to raise ta . ” ing to military courts | “Yoh. Stewed as a billygoat. 1} “te ; 4 @ ~ diet days of the last seasion by giving voters want. | eases h © “nervous dyspepsia” the French children whose fathers | hay ntsc A : bitty-goat. | 1) cases there are “D Tiretalds of the Western front, Denjed | the power to punish a civilian for leomiemne he Tho influénce of women tn being |4°0* lke onedayold home brow.” | disordered appetite, @ sense of full | court"—« power always scrupulously denied military |more and more exerted in American| 7° “ ness in the pit of the stomach, often the privilege of fighting with the allied Mr. Henry donated practically his entire keeping the specter of starvation and want the childhood of heroic France. [poe will begrudge him the honor that has Destowed upon him by, the French govern That he was singled ‘out from a score of | is fine” ° ‘What's become of the olf-fashtoned krouch who kicked because it wus) too cold? | tribunals, In the past, great care has been taken to see that civilians who, in times of peace, might get into the clutches of military authoritiea, should be} turned over to the civil courts for trial by jury. Article 22, of the old articles of war, said: "A/ | polities, It is @ wholesome influences. |, Women are as @ rule more prac. tieal than men, more moral, more |integse, and more stubborn. (Call it loyal, if you don't like stubborn). As 1 gather from countrywide shooting or burning paing in the, stomach. There may be constipation: or &n opposite condition of diarrhoca,. ‘The lower part af the abdomen is fre quently distended, and sometimes, in persons with very thin abdominal “Yeh, three week ee csi HOT WEATHER ZOOLOGY | hispe at c D ol val ne seer people, ts due simply to the enormous value | court martial may punish At discretion, mubject to the | eae ue ca | Wa note that an alert reporter has | "iis. gprs agp oct ges Me work he performed for “Ia Patrie.” | Umnitations contained in Article 14, any person who l peliae Wue: tar peeeilais OMEN | aincovered a new variety of Walrun |" ORnImd bY time oo ptoms may be in t wilt mean | Uses any menacing words, sina or gestures in ita} : inhabiting the icy waters of bring | Ammons er Fibbon in the lapel of his coat wi S wAn | presence or who disturte ite p ings ‘by any | A man who ts more patriot than mentioned general weakness, depres- ] sion of spirita, headache and fullness of the head, vertigo, cold feet and hands. There may be palpitation off the heart, A peculiar anemia ia of4 ten present When there are nosymptoms prow duoed by the unusual state of affairs, of course, no treatment is indicated,, When the symptoms are due to dis- placement, mechanical means, and perhaps an operation, are alone ike- ly to be useful in restoring the om fans to their normal situation. The former includes trusses, pads and to Mr. Henry, but the memory us” he has assisted must ever be a fresh al thing. will join with her great ally tn honoring whose heart went out to the little chikiren on France. partisan. yea man whe wil not be» puppet|,, Were % not for the aignificant fact | | that, as above stated, the discoverer | is @ reporter, we would be mildly as-| tonished, to say the least, But reporters are always discover- ing such things. This particular brand of walrus, | the reporter tells us, is one whore akin is used by the natives of St. Lawrence island for building huts, “with the fur side inside.” No doubt the old-fashioned seient- ists who have taught us walruses have no more fur than a Green Lake riot or disorder.” And Article 14 expreanty Imited the operation of | court martial sentences to those “subject to military | law.” But tn @ revision of the articles of war recently completed by congress and tacked on as a rider to the army reorganization bill, the phrase, “subject | to the limitations contained in Article 14," waa unow | | manipulated by party bomses, | A man who promines little, or nothing, except that he will enforce the law and do his duty as it fronts him daily. A man Who does not pride htmrelt [on being a conservative, @ standpat | ter or a reactionary. Nor a radical, revolutionary, nor agitator. Just a plain, honest man that wil! | try to execute the will of the people. | GO OWT ANO TELL THE POO FISH THAT T HAVE NO SPAR] TIMe FoR READING tt! | tentatiously dropped. | wal Judge Frank H. Rudkin, of Spo- who is filling Judge Neterer’s bench in | ted States district court in Seattle this | established a precedent for the West- ict of Washington Friday when he Today, “any person” who gets caught up m « military police net while {he military is maintaining “law and ordeg” can be convicted of “contempt of court” by @ military tribunal, found guilty, . tm. i | | A man who ean get al th pring, which must be adapted to tJoe Masso, confessed violator of the na- | prisoned or fined $100. It ts another encroachment | people an executive that can worn |mosauito haa side pockets will be n-| oe tes cieee @ caeeres Wane shibition act, the sum of $1, Per- | by the military authority on the domain of civil 1aws| in harmony, with the legislature and | terested in bard 8s addi | +4 tnstrument-maker, with the aid fudge inte to begin at the bottom another power granted to sokllers over the liberties | the judicial branches of the govern. |“ ‘0 scientific knowledge, of the phyeician, Sometimes a sim Jud: nds of civilians, ment : ple broad bandage may be of service up. It is a small thing in Itself; as a precedent {t ‘A man that It doen not take great |\OLD STUFF WITH Miva fered in relieving the symptoms; some- @ big thing, | deal of money to elect. Sharing does not divide but MU) times a suitable corset may be worn plies our pleasures."—Anon. (Providing, of course, we have any- thing to shure) “There is no happinens tn having | and getting; only in giving."—H. Drummond. Ckapecially advices) ee Sign acroms the street: “Denver Dye Works. Tallors & Dressmakers Dyed & Repaired” “Yop, I worked for the county | A man who believes tn enforcing | the laws, including prohibition. A man who will not become ego tintioal, but will retain his democratic nim plicity. | A man who ts not afraid to say what he thinks. | A man tn favor of woman suffrage | A man wholly committed to the | dea of a League of Nationa, of keep, ing faith with our allies, and of America playing a manly, fearless, and generous part in international affairs. with success. At the present day, surgical operation is not infrequent. and {s commonly euccessful, e Perhaps it is the high price of print paper Balabanoff Gon | that keeps the profiteers from turning over {anew leaf. | ___ Mental Clinics Language often reveals the history of thought. To say that some one was “possessed” Implied that Rev. M. A. Matthews will deliver a sermon Sunday morning U. S. Lacks Symmetry, Asserts Professor of Biology; Is He Right? on Tuesday laid to rest one of the most citizens—-Mrs. C. P. Balabanoff. Balabanoff was a foremost figure among the of the state, as the high positions she held civic organizations would signify. “ghe was more than a “clubwoman”™ tn the ding the word is sometimes used by those who | “You aia? How much 414 they 3m woman's activity in what once was man's | 1. V4 inhabited and controlled by some foreign pein D man to race itled sphere. She had the unadulterated esteem | oi hans a devil; to say that he was | poser peaerctry, ba ceri tve you?” tit] fen whe had worked with her in War | “touched” implied @ smaller amount of the same| The professor of biolory said he |army that collapsed, it was the rest | Grientals, egroes OF the |” eminty days” OUR ONE and tn all manner of public movements | foreign influence; and to may that he had “lost /had something to say about men and| of the country, the producing part,| 4 man alli te te lee @ genuihe leader in her community. his mind” left one about as hopeless for his future| Women in America that ought to be| that the army had outgrown.” brave as Jackson, eas human and OBJECTIVE— food sense, a high ideal of public service Promote a good understanding be ag if be bad lost bis goul printed in the newrpapers. That | ‘gy ARE WE GOING o 3 full of common sense as Lincoln, will miss her voice in its councils, And the % an biology tw the actence of life itself ? | areage: be rf 1 ention of dead . em long camber Mra. Ralabanoff for her | the victims With ching, and oftee tortures voor The venetter Gedied his ont G04] “reais un Hsbk@ alse dhe te the bande et the Batic speaking Rocowvekt a m ly In the evengng he will a rye oes thar” pee ten fae, te ciytamae rei of |Mtked the professor please to fire) porter, “but what are you going to| 4 5 Ro hry “ue best But—ts there any such man? discuss the subject, c m jaway do about it? God, or nat | ' pane care of the pennies and the war tax | *#¥*t ‘ndefinitely- “is tho thing that greatly distingulsh-| trees, and animals, and individual |south nor any other class or eeo-| TAllWay. ‘To well-informed people today nobody ts Mterally “poanessed,” tho the word remains; no one is moon- struck, as the name “lunatic” implies; and no one “loses” @fis mind, however badly it may be injured. And #0 the “mad house” and the “lunatic asylum” ———— es aW plant and animal life. That| humana But when you get thore|to, Columbia Colo ts better—Adv, means everything we are growing) humans organised into a nation they has balance about It A dog has) have got to look out for themselves.” four Ingen, two on a aida in pairs of| =fhat’s just it” said the profes care of itself. » but will keep his eye always on the welfare of the publica A warm-hearted, genial, courteous of platforms, Thomas Jefferson, first of ta, wrote a8 good a platform as any. It 10 planks and 98 words. Jefferson called it of Canons for Practical Life,” and bere have gtven place to the “insane hospital,” « place who are in bad for the care and mental health, But that ts net enough Mental disease ts tn creasing, and many people who need advice or treat- ment without custodial care do not Uke to cure of those tin the same size and shape He has a) head in front, balance by a tall be-| hind. Ever think how a dog would | look, or what an impractical anima! he would be, with short legs on ene side and long ones qn the other, or) with head and bail both at one end?| sor, “they have got to look out for themeeives. Their intelligence has got to function, as a kind of meula tor, Nature produced man’s brain for Intelligence just as she produced bia tungs for breathing. Some of us have got to stop and think, and man. Not @ dintherwkfte nor @ poser. A business man, who wil regard running the United States of Amer ica as & businesn, which he ts to make pay, yet which he is to man- age for the benefit and happiness E Buchenan Gospel Anditoriam 1414 Seventh—Near Pike vangelists and Carroll of the people in it A man who wil) cut out tmaugyra! have branches growing | think han.” around the trunk on a regular plan.| “And then,” - a place devoted wholly to mental cama So regular California vag SY hospitals are establishing mental clinton, to which | maid the reporter, of San Diegs, tomorrow what you can éo | ches grow! | we |palla, wtate dinn: rade, society ASPECTS | trouble another for what you can do | ‘he hospital without fear of disgrace, Nothing Mine, if no accident haa happened to/ “Ged Retna thone who help thes. |G. 6nd. Sr ee to. Pig jon 3P.M ’ the tree. nelven,” quoted the profemor. and ™!t pas) < ILD-FASHIONED GOSPEL” pean qeur mickey before have it. | Timely advice may save a later dimster, and ft ts ; | - | eal with os fittle nensense wil “© buy what you do not want, SMeause It is | worth much to get rid of minor mental ills, like|OUR SOCIETY NOT ' premllaare. Bs lade | Seatban 8 P.M | Seventh and Spring eas he dear to you. : | bad recurring dreams or foolish fears and hatreds, |All SYMMETRICAL Columbia Colo, the new American| In short, @ man as honest and SUNDAY, JULY 11 } couts us more than bunger, thirst’ and | hich Keep @ person wretched. “Normal men are built the mme | beer.—Adv. gentlemanly aa Washington, asi ' . way, too. If One eye was twice as fe never repent of having eaten too little, big as the other, that would be ab Mezico’s greatest need is an evolutionary thing Is troublesome that we do willinsty. normal. If one arm grew out of the ; much pain have cost us the evils that have | leader. ack. Instead ot og thesis eppe- M = Matz happened. site the other arm, wou n Fake things always by the smooth handle. normal, There are esses tthe thesa, ain if angry, count 10 before you speak; if over. || » Waste Paper |but they are in hospitals—or dime ~ 2 47 Fy, count a hundred. museuma. I “What's true of outside parte te true of inside parts also, Take the liver and the lungs, We couldn't live without either. Rut if the body “ ran all to liver there wouldn't be . ren all to liver there wouldn't be} CHERRY STREET die.” But what's that got to do with America?” asked the reporter. “We aren't all growing arma at the back is a platform strong enough to hold demo. | republicans and nonpartisans, suffras 4 “9 we gee tae One can do his bit tn mving the treen, the basis sta, wets and drys. stuff? Surely! Jefferson wrote it in 1825, | for the pulp wood that goes into the manufacture of newsprint, by saving the waste paper that ac meral, it is stil t into Sie “comms. to be put Into practice | cumulates around hia home, And, Instead of burn ing it, selling it For the ragman, these days, is paying good prices for paper waste. ‘The shortage in newsprint, that haa run up the Cityward the plowman plods his weary 99HLVSISVA>V{A’A{V{ALAI{AIIIVAA AQ price so that when it can be purchased at all it ts MO N S J. at a rate perhaps 400 per cent higher than a few|°F running to particular organs, are | AL A ‘ WS yearn ago, is such that many of the smaller news| W?? That story would be too good OS Ss Lass papers of the country have been forced to munpend,|t° keep.” . . More than two million tons of waste paper are| | The profemor laughed. He mid he OTT] \ * Need for Economy used annually for boxes and shipping containers.|“4n't mean it just that way. But he Fen BN This use of waste paper saves over @ billion feet|}@4 mean romething like that. It 1 | oe tember. ; was our society that wan lopsided, mment is now paying ¢ per cent interest | 10 an appeal to the public—the honsewife and|®!! the people in it taken together, g Me hay lesue of treasury -certificates of in- | th¢ business man—to save paper, Secretary of Com- thee george I M A G I N E ness. This is an abnormally high rate for | Merce Alexander says that many. of our better| .,. 4. sf garb a ig # = pa ernmet | grades of waste paper are used as pure substitute ng, and might ge Mnited States government to pay, but pay It | HNCee OM vood-pulp and are ons Utes) similar diseases, Our society was making all kinds of book, bond, ledger and writing papers, if the cost of government is to be met. 6 per cent interest rate, if nothing else, ought impress every government official, executive made up of a lot of people doing different kinds of things, as a body was made of cells doing different what you wonld do If you had $1,000 tn “cold cash.” You can be sure of having It In a comparatively short time if you will save Grecenacsareciesnsest OItEOTD OTOL I IBHLEA J legisiative, with the prime necessity of economy 5 7 things. When te y cella go! 1 until certain sum in hand—you pmental affairs. It is bad enouxh to waste Our system of choosing officials ten’t) sing one thing—too many liver & dag rite co haar fr more, Gent money; it io more costly to be « spend. | Perfect, but it requires no post-mortem ez-|celin, way —that made diseare, OF | may start with us for any amount, one dollar or at 6 per cent aminations. when some of the cells got to acting jcay | he latest theory of can- =o) esse =\N cer,” he said, “is that there ts noth A | J an va ees ~) \ ing wrong with the cells themselves : RSS spond’ pag WN NX) week in our Savings Depart SY < that make the cancer growths. It's fea] N \\ only that they get to growing out of ll ment you will have a balance N WS relation to the rest of the body, on > ry of $263.78 at the end of the N N their own hook. Perhaps they are oo NN || HE PHONE SERVICE plaint department and asked when, tionably have heard it. 1 a4ded that|too healthy, But as far as the dix < ar firet your amd $1,401.61 tn fv . =~ |) Faitor The Star: About the time| they were going to come and fix my|many tmen the bell did not ringt|easo Ix concerned It all comes to the N years, N = “brought my family to Seattle the |Phone, #0 when I was at my office I|and that mot infrequently I have had | sume thing—the patient dies. NN H =N 4 could call up my wife. to ask central several times for the ‘ A N SY ie service commission of this * LOPSIDEDNESS OF NATIONS \ i \ P Day after day, I got the same re-| number before I could get service! Nor ANYTHING N . Compound interest fs paid N WS le ordered the phone company tc | sponse, “We will attend to it right over the line, my wife informing me|~* NYTHING NEW vA NS N \ pe. i's away é on each of these occasions that she ‘ow in America too many peo- ro) J in Our Savings Department; company prom! jo s¢| Finally I was able to catch the|had been in the room all the time|ple, or perhaps too efficient people, soon moncy trom time to time, has madi |company manager in his office and/and the bell had not rung. have got to making money without 1) thet nhs N C rere te tee ne An idea my grievance to him. _The| Nevertheless, he said, I would be|any notion of the rest. ‘Their for Q has earned interest and it ts HN “improvernen ‘faulty telephone waa then properly | required to pay the $1 connection|tunes keep on growing like cancer KS red your account, SPW: my arrival here I bought a| connected. |charge, I declined to do this, telling|srowth, and dragging on the rest of N waded fe ” ana mores Ae ae toned Time wore on. 1 overlooked pay: | him I would wait for the return of|the body, and breaking out into nm starts drawing interest the x on the wall, ai went to|ing my bill last month. I called my|the manager from the convention, |sores, It’s unhealthy and abnormal. same oney you N ‘ company’s office to get the thing| home the other day and was told While waiting I have made inquir-| There are a lot of things people re ae a rach pS “eonnected. |the line was temporarily discon-|{fes to find gut w the telephone| supposed to do besides get rich. ‘This continues year after year, ‘The work of connection required | nected. company does to earn the $1 paid for! ‘There should be moneymiakers. But there should be te: rs, and paint- ers, and, sailors, soldiers, miners and farmers too, all well taken care of and developed along their line, un. lena we are willing to grow into a kind of two-headed calf of a coun without your doing a thing about it, for ten years. sytae minutes’ time. A man had @imb up a pole and twist a couple Of Wires together. He had to twist # couple more together on the side ‘of the house. But <he company compelled me to| 1 went to the phone office to pay | my bil) and found I mutt pay, in ad dition, a penalty of $1 to have the, connection made again. In protest I related my experiences to the assistant manager (the man- | such reconnections, And this is what I learned from @ former tele phone operator: When a phone ts “temporarily din. connected” a plug is placed in the switchboard at the central office. N snssessoscnscnreYy Bank by mall if more con venient, pay for installing a phone, as they|ager was attending a convention, 1{ When the bill Is paid and the|try. had compelied the family before me,| was told). ‘The assistant told me it|phone reconnected the plug is re-| “This lopsld sa ‘ | ‘and the family before that—for in-| was a rule of the company to make | moved. lenit tae es tae ie gations ee N : 3 : @ phone that was already in-|the connection charge om all phones| | For ths tabor the subscriber pays form of it that's now. In Athens bo- ALASKA BLDG H HN : ‘ disconnected becausd of non-payment | the company $1 fore Christ peo ' ™ q N i N , ae | st people got to thinking so Our Home WS Minion top of that 1 was required| of bills, BY ants 48 ab Aide chats ts wa-| ur chest ort ate Mae ‘ SQW WV pay for a month's service before service was rendered, in advance. | {t a practice to call up the subserib He also told me the company made | just. It also seems to me the service ertain kinds of refinement that they 7 Member Federal Bank» “SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN BANK ~; of the company needs another going let ev n ‘oing let everything else farming, ‘This I did. And, after a week of| before the phone disconnected | over by the public service commis. |rmanufacture, mone vmakiog, religion, | ing, the phone was fixed so|and inform him that the bill was| sion. jbreeding, individual health. ” And y bers of my family could get | overdue and the disconnection would | ‘Central and call a number. | be made unless the money was forth. | _ But it was more than a month be-| coring. 1 don’t know why we should pay| Greece went under #0 much to have an instrument in.| “In Rome fighting was the craze. stalled that | ly installed Finally there we more soldiers | fore anyone was able to call my fam-| He said my home had been ealled,| 1 don't unde nd, either, why we|than there was food to feed th = Sly over the line from the outside.|as a memorandum showed, but that |should have to pay in advance for, And when all their enemies were ] Central explained to them that the|the call was unanswered. service and then not get the service, | licked the people began to starve oe nected. I told bi wife had béen hi And I can't figure | R t Jine was discon: ‘old him my nad nm home n an't figure out how the|the army itself starved, and became M4 ~ Day after day, and towards the | every day for some time, so indixponed end of the month many times a day, | she coujdn't leave the houne, and had called the phone company's com-|the phone rung she would unques o company can earn $1 by pulling a| discontented, and was an easy victim plug. 1 couldn't do it to other much less specialized armies, NEWCOMER, “In Germany itself it wasn't the SEATTLE Biss ik: Do thin

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