The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 19, 1920, Page 6

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The Seattle Star Ky mail, ovt of city, S0e per month; & monthe, $1.60; @ months, $2.78; year, $6.00, Im the State of Waahington, Ovtside of the state, The per month, $4.60 for € montha oF $9.00 per year, Hy carrier, city, Lie per week, Newapaper En- Published Datty Be “Miscegenation is a dual process. It works upward and downward at one and the time. In Latin America hybridization has been prodigious, the hybrids today num-| millions. In some regions, as in Venezuela and parts of Central America, there very few full-blooded Indians left, hybrids forming practically the entire population, | » on the whole, the white or mezisto crossing seems hurtful to the Indian, for what) gains in intelligence he more than loses in character. But the mezisto crossing is not, worst. There is another, much graver, racial danger. The hot coastlands swarm with and the zamboo or negro-Indian is universally adjudged the worst of matings.| The for the Indian, white blood appears harmful, while black blood is absolutely fatal. _® * * The mongrel’s political ascendancy produces precisely the results which might} > have been expected. These unhappy beings, every cell of whose bodies is a battleground | . jarring heredities, express their souls in acts of hectic violence and aimless instability. normal state of tropical America is anarchy, restrained only by domestic tyrants or) masters.” The above, from Lothrop Stoddard’s recent book, “The Rising Tide of Col- .” is the answer to those who would defend intermarriage between Japanese d whites. Intermarriages between people of different colors have NOT oved satisfactory to either race—on the contrary, lowered the sum of human The very fact that Jap advocates resort to the intermarriage idea is evi- mee that without this possible solution there is a mighty serious economic blem. © Japanese encroachment in America must be checked if we are to have peace. jpanese encroachment cannot be justified by the possibility of amalgamating he two races, for they will not amalgamate, in the first instance, and, in the d instance, they will not produce a satisfactory mixture. © The solution ‘ies, then, in adopting the very same tactics that the Japanese mselves have adopted against Chinese and Koreans. The solution lies in adopting every measure possible to prevent their com- tition on our own soil. And let it here be clearly understood: The big issue on the Pacific Coast—the big issue in city, and county, and/ tate—is the Japanese question. It is the special issue which the people of Seattle and Washington and Ore-| n and California must tackle not one hundred years from now, nor ten years ‘from, but TODAY. ; : " The next governor of Washington must be a man who realizes this. Every uncilman in our city government must recognize this. ‘Our mayor must e it. © We must not flinch, or waver, or be scared by a few self-interested individ- lals who have their own personal advantages to gain temporarily by dealing ith and for Japs. a , pape ' There never must be a repetition of a mayor or city council failing to co- perate on such a measure as the oe bill bee = pe nege hog gd eliminate p tition in one industry in this county. aybe the bill can still be . ed ilman Haas can still make it a living thing, for his vote has er been recorded on it. The restaurant men are opposing it because they making the restaurant men are living in a fool gt their own throats. Let alone, the Japs y ® they have acquired other businesses am industries, to be rid of Jap penetration of our economic life? That is the supreme today. If they control us in our economic life, they will céntrol us politi- eventually. That is obvious. he superior court of King county holds that under our treaty we are com- d to issue licenses to Japs as to others. If the treaty is not to be changed nediately, then the only course left to compete against the Japs is to adopt e course of action, wherever possible, of the Tindall bill. This reserves the ight to the city to contract with only American citizens. This right has been pheld by the courts. It is constitutional. It is within treaty terms. ke * To repeat what The Star has already said: “Tt is idle to talk about the Jap} menace if we are unwilling to act.” It is a fine thing for officials to remember—for- mayor, council, governor, Mgressmen, ever to keep in their minds. Campers, outers and vacationers are now on their | Dfway. Their ways are not our ways. But the woods ere full of them—mostly amateurs, but all en- | ie and willing to learn. _ ‘The pleasures of days in the woods, tn camp, along | Iekes and in the labyrinth of the trout stream their irritants in the way of the possibilities bites and blisters, colds, sprains, and other ills, “more serious because of absence from the beaten where proper medical attention could be ob | The Farmer’s Work “Why should a farmer work 16 hours a day when city people work half as many? They don’t have to." —. Excerpt from a letter to the editor. The reason @ farmer works 16 hours a day (when¢tthe weather! is favorable or the emergency is great) is because he 4 to. It is money in his pocket to do sa He does not have to do it. He may let his field fo untifled, his grain go unharvested, his peaches rot, if he wants to. A sprain means excruciating pain, torn or bruised ‘The motive for hin 16 hours (when he works that ta and inflammation. Try pouring hot water | jong) is entirely within himself. . (a the sprain for an hour. Repeat two or three | if people should starve because he doea not work, fimes a day. Bandage and continue the hot water | he would not have any personal sense of guilt for “treatments. Don't exereise the injury too much. the trag For colds, a hot bath and a good laxative. n ti For + three hours; then one every three hours for a the iner in farm-land value in the United § “| day. | in @ decade to be 118 per cent; in other words, had ‘The mosquito is certainly one of the pests of | pore double Since then it may have he woods. Compensation in the form of speckled | gouhied n. The men who got this increase trout, wild strawberries, wild hor Thuckleberries and so on is fine raspberries, | But the are the farmers, 63 per cent of whom (in 1910) owned! A. their own farms and consequently doubled the value “nkeeter” is a pest. Here's the " which if | of their estates: Meithfully applied to exposed parta, will send the | A farmer's work embraces a great vartety of oceu Eemmeeauito 10 pastureq new: Pine tar, an ounce and | pations. Thin makes {t more attractive than the chore of many a city worker who, from morning t» night, does the same thing over and over again And then the farmer is his own boss. He takes up the, line of work he wants, follows it as long as it suits him and then can turn to something else Many a city man would gladly work more than ight hours if he were in the farmer's position. half; pennyroyal oil, half ounce; castor oil, an This “smear” is actually beneficial to the “akin, too. | _ The outers know that there are as many dangers vip the cities and towns as in the open country. ‘And their number increases annually. They meet Blister, the sprain, the cold and the mosquito "en native ground in the peopled places. They do not ‘mind them in the wilds. Search warrants are being used to hunt for liquor. Why not call in a few rum-hounds to trail it down. Meeting the Demand | Why not call in the mediums to ask old Noah where the dove of peace is? This Is Why “Oh, why docs the hearse horse micker when hauls a lawyer's bones away?” A free verse Writer asked the r The downward trend of prices is encouraging to the small purse, pleasing to the min who feels he ought to get 100 cents for his dollar. Even former question not #0 | extravagant buyers are glad their spree of spending ago. Maybe here's the answer. Anyway, it | {5 over ‘i r be the answer-- Kut there is fear that the Ks ss pendulum may ewin, | Joe Wuski is called “king of the tenderloin” tn | to the opposite extreme, fully qs bad for the ahi cramento. as reckless spending. This would, of course, end in SA grand jury investigated Joe Fuski. It brought | huge over-production,. unemployment, panic, Dashes ts charging crimes of infamy against | ruptcy, and the bread line 3 The thing to do, as the Journal of Commerce, New York, points out, ts— “The demand of the public should be met with moderate reduction of price encouragement be given to buy, but to and steadily and with judgment.” Ree actment of the law of supply and demand ta needed—badly! Prices of the recent past have been figured on the visible supply and Joy-riding demand. | Wearing apparel rapidly i# getting down to the real supply and normal demand basis. Ending the cor shortage will bring food and fuel to the rg But now Fuski may never be tried on those indictments. 2 “You can’t try & man on an indictment like this?” ‘Bereamed and chortied his lawyer, Martin I. Welch, in court, “Why, it is an insult to the constitution that provides fair trial. This indictment in no ‘place specifies, an the law requires, that Joe Fuski, client, is a male person!’ name!’ as the gentle French say, wouldn’t make the solemnest hearie horse in promptly levels and buy normally eed money out of Jap cut-throat competition with white hog raisers.|'* ise. They are helping to|tory get the restaurants of the city) < realize the mit iron a must not be loaded for Pac points or beyond the reach of thel court As & consequence, Northwest is being drained! t the present | je supply here to coal mines. Py of all coal cars, alt Urme there is an am) move all of the coal that can be pro- duced by our mines. and ¢ lare It is money to the farmer to work, and the Diarrhea stop eating, purge the bowels, rest in bed. | teures prove it use intestinal antiseptic tablets, one each hour ‘The latest available figures (1910 cehwum) showed |'° | coal. coal for territory the coal is p NVESTIGATIONS nown, uniemg Federal authorities contend there|that the/perators and miners will an acute coal shortage already in |4o all in thelr power to have ample the “northwest,” meaning the terrt-|fuel avaliable for earty distribution. tributary to the Great Lakes coal operators of the eastern of the United States deny thin, Considerable press publicity has been given this controversy, using the phrase “northwest,” but acific IIFASHION tS THE SEATTLE |EVERETT TRUE SUPFERING CaATS!S MRS. TRUG, MAKE NOURSELE SUCH A ITS Too ALLFIRED HOT FoR you TO WEAR THAT FUR Ih 7 pr taken to prevent. 1 am writing to the coal operators | 00 ompt paper advertising and publicity Prevent, if posible, ft Governor Hart Writes for The Star Today on Our Fuel Dang BY LOUIS F, HART Governor of the State of Washington have madeylivered, it will be tmponible during @inclowe that we are threatened | the cold weather to move ft from thie fall and winter with the worst | mine to consumer, and it should also fuel shortage Uiia state hae ever) be borne in mind that at thin time! steps are | streets and highways are in excellent | from goodness. wo te ensengers crouch.|[| (2x-President Michigan State |condition for iocal deliveries, which FPpoted kn nad nana ween tot Beard Destal Examinerd) 4 be made much more expeds the chattering cubes. The yellow Dental Surgeon and coal miners to urge prompt and me vd ane sheanty than over wet, undelivered telegrams fringed from Diagnosti earnest cooperation, and thru news muddy and slushy streets cian to| My idea is that the fuel producers The New icipon Slat orgie Bascal the nt Pyorrhea Specialist the suffering | and dealers encourngs arty pur-| X-RAY DEPARTMENP which.much a shortage would entail |chases by consumers. I am advised | IN CONNECTION not Place the least ponsible burden upon meaning to refer to Pacifle North-| consumers who order now to try to wort. J. ©. C. SHIFTS OUR CARS TO EASTERN POINTS In any event, we in this state must | uation that in order to shortage the inter comminsion, which is|/ here debated on t directing the distri jbution of rafiroad frefght cara has for some people an jail and yi |restrieted the use of coal cars to the jmovement of coal, and has iseved in structions to the lines serving the! ‘orthwest to turn over all coal care to their Bastern | by and has alm advised the he It is quite apparent, however, that coal cars A with irc on this will not continue if hich ¢ 1 nartly reach this territory and steel articies, ther open-top car commodities: prevented from moving to us. the present time the mines weat of the Cascade mountains are running At Ot to exceed four and one-half days me. antage of the The moveme & week, or approximately 70 per cent Tt would be greatty to the ad coal operators and mt 4 burning is rapidly it im-entimated th 10 months a vei |of the present fue |tries, lighting plants Jconverted into « |will greatly increase th It im, therefore, ¢ n this bur ntate have 1 miners if this time could be increased to full time. DEMAND FOR COAL SOON TO BE INCREASED to change of! burning equipment to con! progressing, and tre ‘ge percentage oll burning indus will re, and this 00 per cent coal we take/ad » situation ard store 78 p he winter months, a severe |shortage may be anticipated, because it In quite a different matter to have 100 per cent production and |cent cara yer With the shortage existing in the comme oree commission, for wh Fast, it will be impossible for us to secure any consideration from the in terstate be. cause the cars will be supplied to the furnishing coal might be considered the more essen. tial industries: hat In other words, unless much of ¢ Everything far Eyo ana DO YOU HABITUALLY FROWN? ‘The habit of frowning or “putting culty. Main.4 3 mptly mined an: the ra oyos gether” Is one of the ro- sulte of eye strain. SHUR-ON FEYRGLASS#OS will overcome your diffi- SCATTLE OPTICAL Co 71S Second Ava +} Cre Ear id de | STAR ’ DON'T. We Ul Say J0 Scrave TO Today's Best Bet: Motoring out | “You the boulevard after chicken—dinner. eee FOO © too old tor thing.” | “Ma’h," mumbled one, the elder of Merlo MacLachlan, 26277 Harvard | the two, “We didn’t mean no harm juve. N., sends ‘em | We wuz just funnin’, as the boys You tell ‘em salt, you've been tn | say.” the collar. | ‘The other nodded agreement. You toll ‘em Fisher, you know the; The pinched face of Mensengar blend | Number One Kleven, peered wondeg. You te ‘em horse, I'm bugry. |ingly, recognizingly at the volunteer You tell ‘em fish, you belong to a of the public morala. that sort of COPYRIGHT 1920 BY FAANH CRANE THE CURSE OF FEAR Tt ts commonly supposed that fear | jis the eure of erime; that thieves school “Didn't 1 see you, Ma'am.” he land robbers and cutthroata are held| You tel em indigo, I'm feeling quired, “Might after the battle of lin cheek by the shadow of the prison| blue. , | Manaaens Junction? I got picked jand gullown, Hxactly the contrary is| You tefl ‘em wtarch, you're a etiff.| off there, you know—got me—” |true, It is fear that makes crims| You tell "em chicken, you've been| But what's the use? You know | nada, in the coop. the rent. | It t* © matter of history and vta-| You tell ‘em hat, you've been on! When Greek meets Greek they | the belfry. open 4 restaurant, When one vet | tinties that in proportion as capital | punishment, torture and cruel penal ties are abolished crimes decrease. Guillotines, jails and prison colo nies have produced more law breakers than they have ever healed. You tell ‘em Hazel, Tm muta. You tell ‘em duck, I'm ® goon. You tell "em Smith bullding, you've fot the stories, cee HOT WEATHER HISTORY meets another they open.« reuniom jand refight the war, Maybe that's why that Jones telegram about the bid on that last job was late this morning, Maybe not. It is time we stepped out of the (Slightly Jazzed) a i darknoms of ignorant medievaliam into the Light of intelligent pay | OBVIOUSLY NOT AN AEM chology. And the psychological (rom the Cullom, Il, Chronicay Mins Edith Mages had the misform tune while picking cherries yester~ day morning to fall off the laddem and break a limb below the knea, jcruth im that fear, anywhere and lany time, Is a toxic, destructive emo- tion, invariably producing moral lesion. No hand thet trembled with fear over did any good and true work, No brain cramped by fear could ever see the truth. No soul except the soul unafraid could ever be genuinely goed. Gootners, when you boll ft down And find its gmence, ts courage. And vies, when you get to the bottom of it, is cowardice. | It ts commonty taught that tt tn the fear of fire and wounds and | poisons that keeps us healthy, and | the fear of the wrath to come that | keeps us moral. But our attitude toward fire and knives and s#trych- | nine in that of prudence, not fear; there is @ difference. In fact, when Professor Dandon, of Berlin, died | we come to know the truth about!iog years ago today, and bis double | these things we use them and en- | Joy them «it by the fire, whittle with life was revealed in all its meanness. All day long Dandon was a teacher & knife and take strychnine pills as! of languages; all night long he was | New U. S. Navy Tent, 12 ox, ateo 9x8, & tonic. Knowledge casts out fear.|a ragged, dirty beggar of the Ber-| foot wall, complete with fig, Fear in an expensive luxury. lin gutters. Between his two jobs| Poles hardwood stakes and bag, he accumulated a fortune of 26,000| Fine for carrying in auto. Prise | Think of the awfui coat of feart It |is mutual fear that makes nations keep up their vast armies, intoler lable burden of money and blood! It is fear that feeds all ancient frauds And superstitions that darken yet so many minds. It is fear that disrupus crowns. We suggest a similar sideline for Seattle school teachers, cee SUCH 1S LIFE She wus very old. White hair, pleasant, even sort of smile, little biack bonnet and beaver skin scarf—you know the kind of an old lady she wan. She toddied along by the postoffica. | It ts just there that the bad little newsboys shoot crap and cuss ‘np everything. ‘i § the families love created. It # distrust of the commie al- mightiness of goodness that makes any man do wrong. Fear is the seed of a human morbidities. greatness bid that tn keeps souls away the fear of Pathology ‘Ame Nemte wes ea pallid matt, Geet, Ané very neariy While Ruby Kund’s full face betrayed, A piethere of bicod which made Mer life hang by @ thread ‘Thetr doctors, ecting tn collusion, Arranged « simple bicod And now both of these girls contais A proper content in each vein, T am urging the fuel dealers that, in View of the fact that ally do not buy fuel eo earty in the wraron, a method be devieed to tend the time for payment, #0 as oe to ald the atuation. Marriage or Jail— She Picked Former|” |. DENVER July 19—Judge Hice > the bench. Mar considered, was a: bad, “Well! wen! anid Doctor A. to Ry rely seems eome stunt my patient, Mra GC, to the nth degree, it. u bie akin, to Bim be thin t riage, he “She's a slick bootlegger, Judge.” urged the arresting officer. “When do you expect to get mar | ried and will you quit ced & man complain softening of the brain, 4 bis complement, to the right per comt, om will doubtless be 4, | bop wil wer welling | “Give you ll then.” sald the “Marry or get jurged.” ‘The average raliroad freight car| costa about $3,000. New Zealand has the lowest infant mortality rate in the world. ‘ For it e101 5 To tranamute common brass to gold." (Copyright, 1920, N. BA) Is considerably less than in normal times —but thinking men and women know that the real value of the American dollar never changes— V The Duo-Art Imperishably (NY i : Why Not Save It? : = Pash en a ; Records the Art of S zee is no pete apa a Mapas eet 5 2 S — put your extra joney where it Ww S Pi earning regular dividends — keep- Master Pianists ing it until the time comes when it will again be worth its full value in trade. For more than 19 years we have never paid less than 5 Per Cent Per Annum on Savings And $1 or more will start you here—in the largest Mutual Savings Association in the State of Washington. ‘When the painter rests his brush, a gfrtous canvas remains. The sculptor, dropping his chisel, leaves a statue. The author leaves a poem. The architect leaves a cathedral. But the pianist? Is his artistry gone—gone forever—as soon as his fingers lift from the keys? No! Hoe ts tmperishably recorte?. The marvel ous DUO-ART piano will continue to reproduce every note, every inflection, exactly as it was expressed by the master, As if ghostly fingers were at the keys, this man. yelous piano will bring Paderewski himself, or Bauer, Ganz, Hofmann, Grainger, Gabrilowitsch, Leginska—all the world’s master pianists—right into your home. N CIM} YZ Zi Resources now™ Over Four Million Dollars Puget Sound Savings and Loan_ Association The DUO-ART plays any make of rol as wel. You, too, can sit before it and cause it to play any Player rol! in the usual way. And it is also a Piano of superb tone and action, either grand or upright, for hand playing. Its versatility indeed makes it the plano of today and of the futura, We cordially invite you to come in and hear the marvelous DUO-ART. Where Pike Street Crosses Third MONI oe i Hula HOURS:—9 A M to 5 P.M

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