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3, im the 8 $4.80 for € mow _ France celebrates today. She % July 14, 1789, v 11920, is a day of fis mublic. F = that life was broken by internal explosion. in mankind; no light in heaven.” world invaluable gifts. ‘ -) formed to endure for generations. again humanity was r: 1g | In the stress of “sumption of the old game o ts. t meaning of July 14. a Back to Normal : 1 b “Vive La France!” But France recovered, won for herself undreamed glories and gave to The vision of freedom which is the most precious is the same vision we cling to thru the jhurly-bugly of these restless days. long abuse of royal power, hurling itself against the Bastile, stronghold of " cruel injustice, and striking the first blow of Revolution. 4 sa day of mad rejoicing in the streets of Paris. ance, smiling in the midsummer sun, knows in her philosophic} fruitfulness which save the world from being a rat-pit of senseless strife. ~The fiends of destruction were loosed in France after the pressure of tyran-} cked and ravaged. : ney in America to draw aloof from former allies, forgetful that gov- ents are not peoples, that a nation’s spirit is not to be judged by the d of a peasant for the soldier’s pay nor by the hard machinations of diplo- ~ We were under obligations to France long before the war, and our obliga- ion has not been decreased, nor should our gratitude shrink because our armies} ined with France against her hereditary foe. On July 4, 1918, all of France learned the original meaning of Independ- bce Day. No American should go in ignorance of, the first meaning and the we are rapidly approaching normal times ‘There is at least one sign of It that should significant. hubbub. The gasoline shortage ought to abate Profiteering should ooze away. The war on, the Bolsheviki, the high cost of shoes, and . OF paper shoes if you will, and woolens and and haircuts, and stocks, 'n everything should Problems of soldiers’ bonuses, and house short- and inadequate production, and treaties, and . and the fate of the Kaiser, and railroad ment, and fuel, and the many other vexations pht on our heads because of, or since, the war, 3 to dissipate in thin air. there is evidence at hand that we are heading things as they used to be. will not suffer any Nght famine, as was a while back. A tanker will bring the fuel oil, it 4s now promised. we'll even retain the nickel fare is unmistakeable. Jooks Uke the good old days, for, lo and behold! fe pick up our newspaper, and once again we read, We did in the good old days before the war: fa trapped; his capture is imminent.” can be sweeter than this? For the 4? ia if again bottle! up™ good old days are surely on thelr way back! | Washington hotel check girl gets promise of a gallon of gasoline from John D. Rocke- , Jr. By golly! That fellow must be rich. Gospel by Wireless | When Melba sang by wireless telephone to an aud! 100 miles away, most folks who read about it thrilled at the alluring idea. ¥ can't all the world listen in, at a future ttme, A @ great diva pours forth her golden notes? man, meanwhile, is not waiting for such a de nt of radio wonders. He is the Rev. Clayton ‘Wells, pastor of Fairmont Congregational church, Kan. With the co-operation of one of his oners, C. A. Stanley, Dr. Wells preaches every to 1,000 wireless operators, amateur and wh live in @ radius of 500 miles from hita. / And the wireless “bugs” iike Jt! Stanley cut tn Sunday night to ask how many operators on his Wwelength had teen to church. The but a babel of noes. A night watchman at a Mt plant near Waterloo, Iowa, said he had to in the daytime, and thus never got to hear } BOOd sermon ‘That started the wirelem “services.” Peat the operators. haven't been told to join in singing pMiymn Number 546, but there are plenty of ethereal WAMens when the concluding benediction has been How are you going to spend Sunday? hile you're resting, remember that Seattle ay in the week. What’s Wrong George E. Morse, after more than 40 years of ome experience on his 500-acre Iowa farm, has to quit the meatproducing business. ‘For long Morse has been fattening 1,000 steers ly. That means quite a few beefateaks and roast for many city meat eaters, And Morse admits ce ‘Phat was in former years. Now, he insists, be can’t ‘Femain in the business because there isn’t a large _ @Mough margin of profit. “Mauch for feed and doesn’t get enough for the fattened Product he drives into the livestock yard. ‘This in face of the fact that city consumers are Paying the highest-ever prices for beef! | What's the matter? Here's an experienced beef pro- @ucer unable to stay on the job of producing beet Because prices he gets are too low. Here are millions | of meat eaters paying more for beef than they paid Before; than they paid in the years Morse admita were | Profitable to him. © What's wrong? _ will be the big issue. In other words, the key the campaign belongs to the cellar. City council proposes ordinance to elimi- nate arking. But what's the use? It has “M0 jurisdiction over the U. S. senate. Still, there’s no reason why a dog should we his bark when man is no longer allow- his toot. Intermarria, ie are feasible, says Jap po- ‘alifornia, Especially by the method, perhaps, we'll be thru with this Teague of | were no | To the pres | licemen are compelled to work EVERY | he made a “fair profit out of the fattening.” But | He says he has to pay too | _ Fight on liquor, predicts Senator Kenyon, | What else coutd | us the atmosphere of those restful days prior | } | | | | person, but they took it for granted that a president of the United States could be nothing lesa, They did not contemplate the possibility of women Yoting or, least of all, qualifying politically for the presidency. And, doubtless, there are rash prophets today who will say that even tho politically qualified the president never will be SITE, but always HE, as ordained by the fathers, Yet who, 10 years ago, would have made ao bold as to say that in 1920 SHE would be among the mem bers of the national committes of a major political party and that SHE would be making nominating speeches in the national conventions? “HE,” says the Constitution concerning the preat dent, “shall pold his office during the term of four years.” HE will coptinue to hold his place in the Constitution, but SHE may actually hold the job/ some day. San Francisco judge got mad when he barely saw Princess Pattra of Egypt walk-| ing into his courtroom in her native costume. What did he want her to do—dance? Houses, Not Talk While the rest of the world is talking about bulld tng houses, discussing the need for houses, finding out the reasons why houses are not belng built, trying to induce somebody to build houses, and be- watling the fact that nobody will bulld houses, there is one place that ia gettirfg houses built, ‘The prime minister of New Zealand has announced that food progress in being made in carrying out the} law, passed at the last seasion of the legislature, which provides for the erection of workmen's homes in different centers of the dominion. One hundred and eighty-three houses are now in course of erection and 122 additional under consideration, with several? other centers to be canvassed, including the city of | Auckland. These homes are being built by the gov-/ ernment and sold to workmen at cost, with the privi- lege of paying in monthly installmenta, ‘This is but the beginning of a general move for the development, not only of business and indus trial centers of the dominion, but for the smaller cities and towns, as well as rural districts. The cost of building has been so high In New Zea- land, as in other parts of the world, that private capital has not been attracted to the erection of homes, so the government assumed the responsibility, The result is houses; not talk. If canines could talk, they'd probably pro- test against the anti-barking ordinance on the ground that it condemns them to a dog’s existence, 96 Words “He multiplieth worth without knowledge,” naid Job, And yet Job, champion goat loser of antiquity, never suffered the supreme affliction of campaign platforms. Tested by real documenta, here is the score: The ten commandmenhts—297 words Lincoln's Gettysburg speech—266 words, Declaration of Independence—1,221 worda, Sermon on the Mount—2,435 words, G. O. P. Chicago platform—6,396 words, Pope—poet—had it right: “Words are ke leaves, and where they most abound, Much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found.” P. 8.—There are only 96 words in this editorial, tn- cluding the postacript! [ Money in the Bank J ‘That there has been a decrease In buying ta true. But there has been no dwindling in buying power. The money has been going into the bank! There were (July 1) 20,380,360 depositors In U. 8. national banks, the greatest number ever reported, That's real prosperity for you! More than one of every five Americans, men, women, children, savings piling up in national banks. Add to this im- posing roll all those millions depositing their savingn | in state banks, savings banks, building and loan asso- clations, and you have something to boast of. With Vermont's failure, woman suffrage can Hardingly be expected this fall, | time. have | THE SEATTLE STAR \EVERETT TRUE To THE LEGISCATURG AGAINST THE PoLtcy ¢ He Done! ing behind me, I turned and re marked, “There are 10 people going into that Jap place for every one going Into the white man's place Yes,” he replied. “I have been stand: Ing here watching them for the past 10 minutes” What we maid was trua The half dozen Japancae salesmen were busy serving & line of customers who kept their entire salen counter occupied nearly the entire time, About the same number of white clerks were in the adjoining place, and they were} idle three-fourths o fthe time, Rare; ly were more than two or three per 8 to be aeen in their pla Among the patrons of the Jap establishment were two sailors, two) soldiers, and & policeman form. 1 waa fotned by « friend, and later) by two others, and we all stood for | nome time watching the apectacie of | white people patronizing a Jap mer chant in preference to a white one.| One of my friends is on the detec tive force. “I'll bet I can put a bunch of Japs behind that white | man’s counter,” he said, “and he will | do twice the business he ta doing with those white people in his store, and I will charge more for my goods than he i* charging now.” From what I mw Tam convinced he waa right. Can you beat it? Fitor The Star: I want to gtve you a pointer on the fish cannery business here, There were some boats here loaded with mlmon and the cannery wouldn't buy them. This fall I suppose the canneries will say there was a poor run of salmon, and they couldn't get any, #0} they'll boowt the price, All of which will be false, They manipulate to} skin the public all the time, ‘The! fishermen say they have to sell their | ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine | “Rayer Tablets of Anpirin™ genuine Aspirin proved safe by mil-| lions and prescribed by physicians Accept only an unbroken “Bayer package” which | contains proper directions to relieve for over twenty years Headache, Toothache, Farache, Neu ralgia, Rheumatism, Cold and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents, Druggiats also soll larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mono aceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Seattle’s Leading . Dentist I am now devoting my entire time to my entd! practice. I make all examinations ‘and diagnose each case as well an do all extract. ing between the hours of 9 & m. and & p, m My offices have bee: established for more than @ quarter of «4 |century, and under my | personal management mnce July 16, 1901, I do not compete with cheap, transient, advertising aenc My prices are the low sistent with first-class work. EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. & Seattle's Leading ‘Dentiag 106 Columbia S$ —s — AND WHAT DID wee IN YOU WHaT THAT BIRD DONE — HS VOTED AND ANOTHER THING “0, | Your o. & at one| But ail in uni-| But say fr —By CONDO! Oo WHEN HG WENT |! 18922 Lee Tect) | THAT'S WHAT DrFrank Crane COPYRIGHT 1920 BY FRANK CRANE part ef your * peace ae he beat his dealing death to the pest-bearing, monquito means even more to the life of the nations than the solxante quinge; the man with the test tube, the serum and the germicide deserves the cross of merit even more than the man with the airplane, the sub- marine or the machine gun. For the deadliest enemies to hu- Off care, with the world well manity are not the shedders of blood, but the corrupters of blood. MY Eine K trent, | History will record that, upon the Fourth of July, 1920, there died a |grenter than Foch, or Pershing, or modern Maecenas, 1 mek your shrine: Haig, tho they were great. ome tee palace almost divine , | For what went ye out ~ to eee. of solace and ree in your processions and festas and rue, with his chin in| ating crowds? A. reed shaken by ck ‘round till we get you|the wind? I say unto you that no |kind of man that is born of woman nphin't the price of potatoes @/ 1, wreater than the kind and cldss to opyright, 1900, N. ML A.) which belonged William C. Gorgas, bea ermit repited, eh ab us EJ We have just de- : clared a semi-annual dividend on the Savings of our Members, at the rate of.. 5% ai annum : 2 for the Six Month's period ending on June 30th. Every Member has shar- ed in the full proportion of the profits of this strong Financial Institution. All Funds left here before Tomorrow Night will earn Dividends from July Ist. Your SAVINGS will be absolutely secure and will. earn Regular Divi- dends along with those of thousands of Northwest's most Thrifty people — Right NOW is the Time to Begin Saving,! TALKS by RESOURCES NOW OVER FOUR MILLION DOLLARS Puget Sound Savings & Loan Ass’n WHERE PIKE STREET CROSSES THIRD U.S. ARMY GOO 3_ ch |, SALES Ty the McAvoy Co. | Olive drab army, biank sheet blankets, $4.60; do 47, 49 khaki coverails “Naw, yuh ain't. This is a new way to get rid of dandruff is to one, It was way out West in Ho-|solve it, then you destroy it |boken, durin’ roundup season. They | tirely. were shippin’ out a big herd of ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; bulle—" |ply it at night when. retiring; “That was the time you left, wasn't |enough to moisten the scaf} and nr” jit in gently wi “The string of bulls stretched from} By morning, most if not all, Hoboken to Kansas City, about 50| your dandruff will be gone, miles, 1 had tuh herd that string all three or four more applications alone.” “Some string of bull.” |stroy every single sign and “Aw, yuh guys don't know how of it ‘The more you see of the big Jead- | liquid arvon at any drug store, ets at political conventions, the easier | inexpensive and four ounces is it ts to understand why such big) you need, no matter how mi Pickford and Babe Ruth. remedy never fails. For the past nineteen years we have never paid less than 5% per annum on the SAVINGS of our Members and all those who leave Funds here Tomorrow will be credit- ed with Earn- ings from the First of the Month, and receive Full Six Month’s DIVIDENDS on December 3lst. As you know, the difference between SAVING and “hoarding” is putting your money where it will earn more money, know- ing that it is SAFE and AVAILABLE when you most need tt All funds are invested only in First Mortgages on Improved Property, in City, State or Govern ment Bonds—as required by our representative Board of Directors, and Strict State Laws. We invite you to be come a —as litle as One Dollar will Start You on the Road to Thrift! a Today'n Best Bet: Milk comes in| weet Pieniers. oe tine quarts and gold comes in QUARTZ. |ing blankets, 6 robes ao rad line of plaid blankets, fancy auil “Yes, Tam am firm beli in| Pillows; 600 0. D. army reclaimed ] peliever ee ine ae $1 hyd 9 To do this, get about four the finger tips. |completely dissolve and entirely 4 tuh a story.’ You will find, too, that all itching — “You teflum, bull, I'm a bunco|and digging of the scalp will stop, steerer.” and your hair will look and feel @ eee hundred times better. You can get Tt ta crowds follow Doug Fairbanks, Mary |dandruff you have. This simple — oa” |0._D. : 6 and 6-1, bat : 94 | WHO 18 GREAT? oobscinatigas vale eh |eotton, | ng quilte end ime celebrates the action of a mob, its fury fed | A great woul han panned. “Why, when I went to Enrope the| went, $1 white and ; j William ©. Gorgas in dead. people left on the plier all shouted mray wool gocks, | Oc . cig comes , Ev ‘There will be no flagn at bait mast| ‘Bon Voyage” Today they shout | Gregs and work shoen, $7.60, $8.60; W ’ | ‘Bun Voyage.’ \they relieved that tired feeling from July 14 everywhere and every door bung| tnaty what it is, a BUN voy ‘oye while in the war, and they \ 1 ! i July , with crepe and funeral services in al!| that's a relief ship to Vancouver | will do the saine for you in all af ri ; and bands and holiday attire in every part of the great lchurches, as there would be if we 08 oe RS I i, understood what greatness ia Bt @ beotlegger’s profit yo alee | charges, iisee esbt. Fun toa ¢ . , | For this man was greater than)" *)'” 620 Third Ave. aut P § . , 3 come the ) oie 20 : good and that after agqnies and horrors come the years of calm hkings. Ife outranks Napoloon,! on, water woll'! Oh, water wolt'!| One Block North of Court Flow Gel | Charlemagne, and Tamerlane The poor sardine was hard of 2 i RR i In the country whither his soul | herring: he couldn't pe very vr 7 as Pessimists said: ‘There is no goodness han gone he t# recetved with more|‘ither, but he had Hgss voice, am ; S s : $ ; THIS CROWD WANTS TO READ THE CONe | |nonore than any car, sultan, nabob | nure wat ® shark, | act . VENTION BULLETINS, 4NO THOY Don't or emperor, for they in that coun ( fe ‘ _ He the |wany TO LISTEN TO ‘ONG OF Thess | 7 now the real worth Of men. in|. 1ave be blind.” ‘That's why they ep * a 6 bonat of her p Between France and the United States a bond was||HACF=IN FORMED, KNOW=1T= A FANT oe eee et ie ee at thins | But the see (C) in divorce. . A blood bond it became in time when} pad a oe HARANGUG tf — wealth o'er gave’ mean nothing to] GREAT MEN YOU NEVER — | oe v cAsS 3 oe © . nave a - Hn np OF mah . scie A ones LEMME DUGN—He — didn’t q — politics and reconstruction problems; in the re-| | inex have but one test of great) start life; it wan started for him. He i , ; ” na! one, Kervice of j “beggar my neighbor” abroad, there has been a) | In thelr Hall of ame te inscribed |Svervone beat him. en Pat sail lin gold.and fire: “If any man would 4 ‘: " be be ‘ereatent tinong you let him be| patty Joined the 1. W. Ws and tried 1 T¢ yonr gums bleed you th fant of All! but | have Pyorrhea, This dis- 2 ~ t on aa L to| July. He got the insane part, but ave Pyorr' | 1 eee eee een an ia. | they got hin before he got the safes. | €ase should be taken care Gt j thle metuention he te a. tepe te the|, Safe cracking wasn't safe, so he | of at once, to insure good , ™ | w Hero, the Twentieth Century Invented 4 new shell game. He filled health. hae Noble, the Conqueror, the true Ariato-| fq erm were! powder and caught ar crat, Bervant of All hs aoe deren bo Mens For the next 30 days, we = Ho was not Called great He Was] sad‘take a general's position, which | Will give a liberal discount ‘er Teens honor comes to him not trom| Wa Very common. It wasn't long | on all Dental work. 4 Qf 4 before he was ahead of the govern- his Position nor from his Posses:| vent and kept tila icauche | All. work guaranteed 15 ® sions, but from his Work. him in the 1 years. inj | lie was not Vlected to anything. ’ ° r f the F h, | | He was Belected, chosen for his abil tind ot er: of being the lead, the ieliton ~ ossession 0: e french, ity, and he did that whereunto he Me aie eRe sialias . Ps & was chosen. buljet_got th his teeth and when he United ste Mis army uniform was but the — — key to opportunity, for he was oe | eed, 73 = swallowed it and 7 ” “He” & greater army. | See oaiee hat ee nl a e Ho wan generalisaimo in the war| How could he choke to death with alniess % |@ broken heart? Why, his heart was L _— on — | WHY 18 IT 80? fish in Canadian markets. eae im Dirt {in bis throat, Yours would be the D ° After the 26th state han ratied woman's wuttracn.|,Paitor, The IAG. On aturday | 1 rote tie Saat Dut te Deeble| Mis “victoiea In. Havana, Guava Pawne the whole Mexican army was entists “ one shred.of comfort will remain for those who still ‘ ¥ po bet 4 " quil, Africa, and Panama were 4 § noticed that two firew sales were doing to rob them. i eee | view with dismay the entrance of women into political taxing piace in adjoining premises on W. E. TURNER, neneres tee more xicreodtieg phe ‘new £24 at Venicd by the ee 608 Third Ave. Ge equality. Second ava A white man had rented | Sitka, Alaska. | Waterton, se Gotteenning “|im to have the initials of the sweet ot These may find some satisfaction tn the fact that an entire store and a Japanese had witidae M a - His woldiers fought not with pomp | D¢art tattooed on the limb. | th the Constitution of the United States will continue rented half a flower store next to Tl sis chveutiestamen and thun-| He: “I eee you have a ‘T’ on your! ‘ ct to speak of the president as “HE even tho some | him Inescapable | daing 4ctine, manag og silent labor. | Fm.” Dandruff Surel to future president may be “SHE.” On both show windows, the white gt stories they grappled with chemic| She: “Yea, but I think the nezt| y H a “HE,” saya the Constitutian, deserfhing the author |™4n had placed the es oy wae toe NY KDOMUND VANCE CooKR formulae, in stagnans pools and dis | letter would look better.” Destroys the Hair 8 ity of the president, “shall have power, by and with |!" Owned and Operated shins 9 ‘Ant! | mal swamps they waded with ash oe ee the consent of the senate, to make treaties,” ete [had decorated his window with! AT can, larvacide, and fumigant. Their] “I slways call my Ford "Conven-| Girls—if you want plenty of thick, be " ‘ f American flagn The white man's . .|tion,’ because I start it with a/| beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all te “fe shall from time to time give to congress wounded died not on grandions bat | J i RTORS goods carried rds showing the od hte! iefleids, but sed out unnoticed in| prayer.” | means get rid of dandruff, for it will fe information of the state of the union.” ete. “HE the Jap's did not pen, Uleflelds, but passed ou jn os 6 | rm + Be oe . beta |Orices._ the Jap's ¢ “The sont of wurar te past al! bounds: | fevered torture upon hospital cota. |starve your hair and ruin it if you may, on extraordinary occasions, onvene both} | watched the people going tnto|1 aim buying I wow In quarter pounds!” Der the enh can: Gripping earbelte LIARS WE HAVE MET | don't j geome both places for about 15 minutes, father! 0, celibate saint! /ACid Fanks aw @ savior of civilization! “Speakin’ of herdin’ cattle, why—"| It doesn't do much good to try te — Nowhere in the Constitution did the goed fathers|then, noticing a young man wearing eo of all fleshly [with the tank; the petroleum sprayer| “We've heard that before.” brush or wash it out. The only sure specify that the president must be a male an American Legion button stand- ‘ dis en ap use rub of and will : ail uch