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for € me f ba ' who work there. and perhaps, “Not the doctors their day of rest. i Not the mayor nor the ' regular! Pais days shalt thou labor. enth was to be a day of rest. it might develop into somethi RE i Sa ‘ are not of the mold of the ) elared that famous satirist, " intolerable if the world was t 7 ” ny Washington This was the Biblical admonition. It was an injunction given the human race that g more than a mere workhorse. The Seattle Star Ry mal, oot of city, He par month; # mouths, $1.50; @ months, $2.78) year, ha oF $9.00 por year, The fool that eats till he is sick must fast till hé is well. “That policemen should demand a six-day week was inevitable. That it will ‘entail an added financial burden upon the taxpayeys of Seattle goes without t But who has the moral right to deny them their one day of rest in seven? : Not the business man who closes his store every Sunday, nor the clerks Not the manufacturer who closes his shop every Sunday, . Saturday afternoon, too; nor the workingme _ nor the lawyers, nor the dentists who similarly provide for An Edison will sleep but a few hours and recognize no but the world is not made of Edisons. genius. And it is fortunate, indeed, that all men “There is only one Bernard Shaw,” de- “and that is as it should be, because it would be hick with Shaws.” The normal human being needs the weekly human. We want them to be that. And we must treat them accordingly. Pabliahed Dafty by The Mar Pubitan tn, of the By carrier, per month, Lie per week. S un —Thornbury. n employed there. council who vacation at will and have their Sundays || EVERETT TRUE You' A MEMQCR No, MSTER NRVE | f THIS Society MAY Have THE SEATTLE STAR —By CONDO SOME NOBLE AIMS IN WUsw, BUT IL CAN'T SSC: THEM PROM THIS EXD The sev- Sundays or holidays; day of rest. And policemen are | | Rastus and the Poles | 1 would almost sy,” Massachusetts, told Ho “The right of the church wo P mot for property-holders.” | The church wonld ) stroyed. It would live as F mortality of his soul * E without property, without wealth @s infancy it did not perish, altho bolders of that time were opposed, mously, to the church of Jesus Christ. on poverty. It was most ch the : en rtable pews. holders, nor were th ~ but m ©) by property hold for a camel to pass thru a needh ich man to enter the gates of heaven. | ¥t would benefit Calvin Coolidge mu “the history of the church f | mand to the rich young ‘tan: | “Go and sell that and thou shalt “and come and follow Me. gay of the year 1914 or thereabout } the long hot summer evenings plea: and your family by reve 7 flee any of these old ps On the last page a grocer and close by is the advertisernent merchant who offers $25 ) And here is a show man low-cuts for $2.43 a pair, “Why didn’t I think pe will sigh. = “And look at this! ma will the sheet out of his hands, Gress advertised for $3.50. with a July all leather, What were the days?” fi that @ays will disclose Were complaining governors were fignte why pri Were organ!, the t k were going 1 © pur g co-operati a. “People never know when they are well off,” Marks ma in philosophical mood, Calvin Is Wrong Calvin Coolidge, governor Now come the allies with a proposal for armistice ty Cross college graduates, perish if it were the live tf all wealth were de long as human intellect exists, as long as mortal man believes in the in The y can, and haa, lived without money, — In the days of property. wellnigh uoant The chureh ey y of them pe H @muse they preached the doctrine that it is easier eye than for ach | Now that San Francisco has rekindled in © Seattle breasts the desire for an adequate | | auditorium, we might pause to inquire what has become of the late hotel project? Light Summer Reading too. ires ng ¢ ke when tte temples of worship were the a of ¢ Lille, the ‘banks of the Rive he Garden of Geth ‘pemane, and k It haa beco: ‘weaker in vitality, as gold bh ‘3 ured into collection-bex, as marble has re structures, as benches early Christian martyrs ported ed be “to study | rom the stable of Bethie- hem thru all the cenerations when Christianity bied ‘and starved In the hovels of the poor while license “and pagani«m thrived In the palaces of the powerful. ‘Coolidge might do well to read again Christ's com thou hast, and gtve to the have treasure in heaven; “But when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great pdesessions.” If you have tn your house any old newspapers, you can make nt for yourself in the pleasant memo advertises, casually @mough, a sale of 25 pounds of sugar for a dc the ing f men's of buying a dozen pairs?’ exclaim, snatching “Here's a fine gingham Jo you know about that? You couldn’t get the same thing for $15 today.” And bere. are madras shirts for a dollar each fand collars for two for a quarter and socks for 35 cents a palr “This ts lke fiction,” muses brother Bill. ose And yet a survey of the news columna of these even to In and housewives om iba, re While the shimmie will be barred at the Scott benefit dance, it will be perfectly prop- er, nevertheless, to ride down in a Ford. $9,000,000,000 a year, fin the year before ever to allow another one to upon the world? means to pre- Cannot the human race devise some vent another catastrophe so terrible? Gollars cau be reckoned, and it is burden; its other cc While doughboys . metal by fleecing. has her schooners. an Its cost in enormous n never be reckoned, were getting bronze medals for fighting, others were getting gold suits marked down to $15. | sale ‘The national debts of the world now approximate | $265,000,000,000, agninst $44,000,000,000 at the begin- Ming of the ‘eat Eur war. The interest charges on thi» 4 of debt now exceed | ast about $1,750,000,000 | Even if Germany hasn’t a navy, she still Caskets are about the only thing that con- between the Poles and Bolshies. Said proposal con tains the provision t the Poles are to retire to! thelr own natural frontier, meaning thereby that the Poles had not stayed tn their own yard before, but went foolin’ around outside Looks lke the Poles might have been trying « vitor a war of conquest themselvean Which tx & mighty precarious undertaking tn these days of fresh memories of the chap who was gving t create a place for himself in the sun. The Polish situation reminds us of ‘Tastus *Rastus went aburfting one day for rabbits and mis-| & wildcat for something he could tackle, He} tackled it, And when be got hold of it, be coukin’t| o But Mebbe Poland never heard about ‘Tastua Barber was killed in an attempt to ride|! Niagara fails ina barrel. Failed to get a close shave, soll In 2081 B.C. “2B : Hammurapt was @ King im Babylon, who diet 2 tol eC Hammurapt formulated and posted a written cc@p|necrets, but the sociable «mall talk of lawn which is preserved in nearly complete form, | and has been translated into Engtish. They were simple laws of eyeforeye justion If & builder buflt a house, and did not eonstruct tt property, sald the law, “and the house which he built falls tn and kills the owner, then the builder shall be put to death.” One may reasonably imagine that the houses were well built. The law fixed the amount of a murgeon’s fee for a mucceaatul operation; If the patient died from the operation the surgeon's life waa the forfeit. Eight gur of corn was a year’s wagen for @ field laborer, fixed by law. The law also fixed the yearty| wages of oxdrivers and herdsmen, the rental of oxen} and cat and the wages of artizans, such as pot tera, carpenters and ropemakers. Two shekels for each sar of wurface was the leral price for tullding that house which the con tractor must bulld property, if he hoped to live to build another. There was no chance to profiteer! building. i ly, in thin country, there has been sentiment for government regulation r laws to prevent profiteeri ka h regulation in new or nove should get out his oulja board and put in a call for old King Hammurapi! Those born beautiful can thank their creator; then there are those who can thank the reporter at their marriage. Democratic Platform by the democrats at San} carry the country for them. | tform adopted The pla ‘rar in not ge grave errors, such as the inistrations tatementa of facta have joined with the rue of Natfons into politica, They a particular issue of It, That was unfor-. they can at least plead that they were republicans in putting have mac it ves on various counts. r own whrtax system, but it in doubtful if any one else is, They claim economy as one of the 1en of the Wilson administration, but the facts do not bear them out—particularly the after-the-war facta, : The constructive part of the platform starts off with a labor plank, that, reasonably construed be gratifying to the country. Reasonable co’ does not mean anything Uke P, | however, struction. They follow up this by squarely backing up the Federal Trade Commission, a department of the gov-| tion t ernment that had won dist! of unserupulous and profitee winning the hate pecial Privilege in. | In the Presa the thanks of the clerks tn the | be th te || deserving of considerable attention, fo th er It th about anyone else in your organtss-| tion, you drop a pebble Into the po | shoe policeman.’ we must! POSTAL MEN THANK National Federation of Pastoffice| s**t him fest, I said. And we! jwent after him, into the crowd, | PAitor The Star al nervice at Seattle for the val 6 employes can 4 ‘Small (| BY ROGER W. BABSON | ‘The Chinese have a proverb some | ing lke this, “A word let slip, and! teama of borsea ‘can't pull is dit from the yellow man te rit sume up the cause of much of © friction and inefficiency that op up in almost every business ®# not the leakage of business At gums up the machinery. When you say anything to anyone and the ripples run in ever-widening | circles. Even tf you are sure what) you say ts right, .you can’t keep it fr uw a by goenlping, tt tn a od about ar ‘om being twisted on the next repe | ———— tion, and you run a large chance of ing an innocent person much harm Cut out the emafi talk on personal! jon. It wastes time, it you| the listener's estimation, It ‘works | justice on the person talk | and it can't possibly do yone any good Why Children Catch Editor’ Desiring to ex-| Clerks, to that effect. It ty hoped that the advanced pay|Where they were all fighting will tend to stop the big turnover | Was @ mixup. uable assistance rendered In advo-| that hag been the bane of the portal |Tan away caUng a more adequate miary for) service and thereby do much to tm ‘a motion prevailed at| Prove the service as only experienced the last meeting of local number 28,/ and well-trained hands and minds ASK FOR and GET The Malt for Infants and Invalides | Avoid Imitations and Substitotes 7 s Mail || advocacy of a wage increase, and es Pecwlly Ue local prem wk Pvoen, Bec ry Local 38. Rowe Show » Succes Eéitor The #tar it! Beattie Rone society I want to thank you sincerely and heartily for the splendid publicity y to give our recent rose sure that you thought the undertak. | ing & worthy one, or you would not! jhave aided it as you did. tendance was nearly double that of lest year, wards, wns nearly four times as great as at any previous exhibition held by this society, Again thanking you, T remain, On behalf of the paper helped | now. 1 arn! ur p ‘The at which, in the turn back Yours sincerely, IVAN W. GOODNER, President. Original ed Milk Beninat police. D's. COPYRIGHT (GLO BY FAANN CRANe r Cc. Twine Tt ts very To be sure, they are | ng found protecting capital strikers, but that is simply because tain brand of capital has that which needs pro-| rabbit saumg tection, freight cars. Labor haa only 1t#\ asked mw, if it had freight cars the blue *» would look after them also. It i# also true that police nder| "Yer orders, sometimes carry out the | manufacturer. command councils. the fault of the men, of vicious mayors and| “About how t that is manifestly not| “Well, whone chief | ton. virtue is to do a8 they are told abusing the police, in the great war between labor and ball game, ‘are! account of @ Paris policeman named | | Portenseigne. dark hole where a number of roughs "fied Advertising Columns Wednes- {|severing the artery of the right arm |wounds were dressed. '|newspaper reported called on him. |muid to Ganne, ‘I believe I'm stuck.’| I wtll bad the knife sticking in my|us that to be a champion billiard Hoe said to me, ‘Me, too.’ player one must use one's head. |'Then other officers came along and| Uhub, we'v@ beard a lot about the! We. therefore, wish to thank all of took tus to the infirmary. We were | solid billiard fvortes || the friends of the service for the|red with blood. There, I lont myself. | * * jnerves no less at our hands. Of course, policemen are human. They make mirtakes. Doubtless some of them are bad and cruel, as such kind exit in every walk of life. the policeman, as much, is entitied to the honor and love of all right4ninded Disease “A teresta. The debt per person per year for the aggregate “ pepuiations of the countries for which figures ae Sante ne no MAAN ngntont epnetia tet ena gy ot cargace” Aled against $27 in 1918 The advocacy of a budert system ts only weakened | @ annual interest charges per person per year | tecaune the reoublics ned Bow is about $6 against $1 1 Be | a he republicans are for It, too. ills year 1700 the debts veere | ,, Planks chiefly notable by their absence are tha Be ur 43 countries Agere | uquor and Irish statements that created such a row ciahinia ere ft the aggregate world | 2%,the San Francisco auditorium. caus around” $4,560,006.00e ate world | ‘The turning down of Bryan's profiteering plank and 1816, about $7,0 0. At the begin | te soldier bonus plank falls under a different head ting of the European war the national deta ata | ‘2% Lack of action on these points showed timidity Et gbproximately $44,000,000,000 that will get the country nowhere Could the world stand another world war an coatly | ..7R? same applies to the absence of @ naval plank. fas the last? Is not the price of war too terribie | None was even mentioned, altho Secretary Daniels was at the convention and conferred with membera of the resolutions committee on the subject. As outlined above, the democratic platform ts a fair enough document, but no Magna Charta, One wonders whether the cha A plain prays for the convention or the country, bed When a, thirsty brother nurses a grouch, you might call him a wet nurse. j And now the sun never sets on British oil. | What's cooler than a day in July? HILDREN whose teeth are looked after by a good dentist are less likely to catch the measles, mumps, diphtheria, whooping cough and scarlet fever. Good teeth stand for good health, and good health is the best insurance in the world against the diseases of childhood. Weakly children are the first to get a disease when it appears in a neighborhood. It depends upon parents whether their children shall have good teeth when they grow up. A little care DR. PAINLESS PARKER and attention to the teeth in early life means better looks and better health in later life. Also it means more success | in whatever pursuit a boy or girl may follow, for success | depends more upon health than any other thing. Registered Dentists using the E. R. -’arker System in- vite parents to bring in their children for free examina- tions. Advice from experienced dentists, if followed, will have a good iifluence all through life. ry ih Patnioss Parker Dentist using the E.R. PARKER SYSTEM 1619 Westlake Avenue Phone will heal that bruised skin guickly Applyit freely after cleans- ing the injured spot thorough- ly with Resinol Soap. Do not hesitate—no matter how bruised or broken the flesh may be~as Resinol Ointment contains only the purest and mildest balsars which cannot irritate, Its cooling, soothing effect is almost immediate, A boon to sufferers trom ecrema and other skin troubles, Af add drvge ists. Elliott 5494 The fact of the matter t# that Going capital, tery, What heroes some of these police sion I have just been reading the He plunged into a| (ound tn the wore fighting. When the fracas was over the rascals had all fled, and Portensrigne lay onthe ground with four knife wounds, two in the back, one in the shoulder, and the other day) gerald. (Signed) He was taken to @ hospital and his| Then he in| sisted on being carried home. A/| Melinda, wife liere t the acount given by I, his wife, lof fighting literature, as simple and| money bills after bilis at the Oak-| jand Grocery Store for him, also paid nalve an account as any war hero ever gave, | Dr. Wheeler “It was all simple enough. There|Mitzgeraids eye July, 1919, and gave) My | him money to pay for other bills he loompanion, Ganne (Paria policemen himaalf made. This I have proof. was a nasty crowd in there. alfvays go on patrol duty in pairs)|I will pay po maid to me, “There's a fellow in there} His Wife, with a revolver, 1 just about! When I tried to get up I) One shoulder, (La, alors, je wuts parti)” With his free left hand he made a renture, signifying that he had lost himself in those dln regions border ing on the land of death. “My mother and my wife are look- for money? “Yea, 1 didn’t get it” Bee by the »- - ~ ‘ | Lovely Winter We're a“ A . pleasant to intelligent | column, if hin name is mentioned, and friends of labor to hear bitter talk | pastes it in the alburn), says @ sau manufacturer back In Milwau-| against kee built up a reputation for ® cer such as factories, tills and|along one day for an analysis, and Don't you use some horse tn this | lenake of sausage?” | use some,” admitted the I make it @ 60-50 proponi One borne, (From the Kokomo ‘Mtbune.) West; will sell my is Uke | bungalow, furnished or unfurnished; | throwing bricks at the umpire in a/lso 3 graves in Crown Point ceme- | old part Immediate pomes THEY TELL On and after this date T wif not be responsible for any debts made! by my wife, Milenda 1, (8. W) Fite | 8. Ww (And on Thursday this) 1 hereby notify the public that I, never run any bills against the | nelther did he pay any bills for me. MALINDA 3825 McKinley ave, City. eee Once upon a time we called dollars | There tron men, but now in the reign of) I fell down. The gang profiteers we tag them steals. bi “So you married for love and not | Ain't that nice?” married for love, but I TUMADAY, JULY 18, 1926. (who always elips this nausage. He called it| An inspector came DR 4. BINYON Free Examination Best $2.50 GLasses on Earth We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really «rind lenses from start to fin! and we are the only one in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE, Examination free, by graduate ope Glasses pot prescribed baolutely necessary. much? oné rabbit.” eee 5-room cee THE WORLD Tacoma Times Clasnt. BINYON OPTICAL 1116 FIRST AVE. FITZGERALD. Rugs and Carpets CLEANED The Fuzzy Wuzzy Rug Co, Since 1900 or 8 W. 1 Phone Capitol 1233 Fitzgerald, him 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 1 payed out of my own for the operation on| A Bie 15¢] Fine Lunch 15c With EB. FITZGERALD. 15¢ 15¢ 15e 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15c 15¢ 15c 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ 15¢ BEST * COFFEE and Real Cream HOYT'S 322 Pike at 4th We Never Close ard shark informe | eee paper that there ts a ing after me all right. I'l goon be Dieamy epidemic in England Epi on feet and at It again.” |demica are great thingy; the flu epi SS SSF SS We make @ good dea! of stir over demic helped the soldier who dies in battle against the enemies of his country. The po-| lieerhan who dies in battle against the enemies of,mankind surely de | phere, “Long jitt ‘There ts a “You are? “No, I sell poor preachers get a turn. eee Whenever a president is elected tn Mexico a loud shout fills the atmos But it's the president who shouts ever from Paris to the extent of im forming the Americans that the next fashion will be paper dress. Then we will noUce the SHORT-' AGE in paper! “Yon, Tm a great advocate of the overall fashion crase™ Beauty may be only akin deep, but these peaches look just as good if they are peeled off. the doctors. Now the Wa WA . Wf Complete*\ \/ Service live the president” eee hint that bas @rifted Se Natfertu funeralMirector \ Are you a farmer™ overalis™ eee » 7 AIL URN LEFT HERE ON OR BEFORE THURSDAY, JULY 15th, WELL EARN DIVIDENDS FROM THE FIRST OF THE MONTH S777} NS 4 Y/N ' CHOOSE ONE DAY— to start that Thrifty Habit of Saving. on or before Thursdap, your money will start Earning DIVIDENDS FROM JULY FIRST. We have ust declared a Six Month's Dividend on the Savings of our Members. at the rate of 5% per annum and for the past Nine- teen years we have never paid a less amount $1 or more, will make you a Member of this Mutual Savings Assocta- tion. and you can add to your Savings each week or each month. Resources Now Over $4,000,000 Puget Sound Savings and Loan Associations 7Ghe Largest Mutua! Savings and Loan Association in the State of Washington ‘Where Pike Street Crosses Third You are just starting on the last half of a most eventful year — the next Six Months will roll around almost before you know it—and another year will be LOST or GAINED—de- pending enurely upon how you use the time TODAY OR TOMORROW If you leave your funds here QA Small Sum— wee" ly Ga