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=| The Seattle Star 6 mn the $4.60 for ¢ mo I it Dame Fortune m: with any certainty, be foretold. | Published Dany by The Mtar Publishing Oo. Prone Mote Se per month; # months, $1.50° @ montha, $2.75; year of Washington, Outside of the state, Tho pe tly, wihe OF $9.00 per year, Hy carrier, city, lie per week. ay hold in stre for him in his quest for the toga Whatever betides him in this direc- in, the state will remember Col. William Inglis, however, for the faithful and cientious work he has par in after-war work. That work has, indeed, on the battlefield. But it was work that had to -be done. ork that must still be done. a right to expect woul | Unfortunately, not every one charged with reconstruction work has been d with the spirit of we read of cases s' received from the government “the $60 discharge bonus and two wood- and nothing more. every one that thirst- h, come ye to the waters, id he that hath no money; ie ye, buy, and eat; yea, buy wine and milk it money and without saiah 4:1. to the 5 time {t ts on the tin of to say to your little boy be stopped, but the) not know this. j performed, not only during the war, but in the past which It is It is work of reconstruction the ex-service men ld be thoroly looked after. been less spectacular than the engagements in Col. Inglis. ; uch as befell the Seattle man who, to use his own It is enough to make decent men boil that men who have sacrificed as much as this one should be so neglected by the federal government. It made Inglis boil. And he worked with the Washington authori- ities. He worked persistently, refused to be side- \tracked by the seemingly impenetrable red-tape of |Washington. He got this man some $2,000 in pay- |ments that had been due him on the government in- surance plan. He got soldiers entitled to vocational training their proper places. He worked without! stint for the men whom he laved, with whom he} fought, whom he led from this state overseas. Col. Inglis now feels called upon to extend the’ sphere of this work. He believes that as senator he can devote himself still more to the interests of these men. This may be so. This much we do know—the veterans’ welfare commission will be hard put to find a successor to Inglis, who will prove as conscientious in the per- formance of the duties with which it is charged. When You Go for a Rest—Rest Really reat when you go away for your vacation this year, | Dent ;|make the mistake you perhaps have made In other years of wasting ner ¢| vous energy in vacation time rather than storing up a fresh supply ‘The past few months have probably been for you—aa they have heen for nearly. everybody—months of uncommon stress. The months ahead are not likely to be leas stressful. Prepare for them. Don't row or tramp or golf or darice or talk yourself into exhaustion during your two or three weeks of holiday. Give ahe crowded resorts of vacationists a wide berth. THE SEATTLE EVERETT TRUE— pore BiaAw De PLOP AwrFvow § |AW FAFFLCOWF |PLIFE FU Bowr BLAW It a CTS bk Gas Is * * & ~ Bu CONDO | Doctor Frank || CRANE’S Daily Article (Copyrtaht, 1920) Declaration of Independence. |wwer, “No, what about her?” Today's Beat Bet: Make it snappy! eee “You my: “Have you heard about the girl who swallowed @ hunk of) map?” A kind friend tn mupponed to an forever Then you sing, “She's blowing bubbles.” | oe The, fellow who te always #0 loud about ‘the fow shots be has left in his cellar refers to the coal chute, eee And now one person writing in the newspapers tells us that these one- piece bathing muita are helpers in making this country recognize art. Why? Tecause they resembie DRAWERS, Frying Pan and Fire. \| Class Nonsense. om! it in quite an desirable for the 24 worker to be free from the tyranny of the Walking Delegate as It le sor ON* him to be free from the tyranny 0 hd D r the proud and haughty Capitalist. What's the use of @eing delivered from the frying pan.of a John D. Armour of a P. D, Rockefeller, if all lyou do im fall into the fire of Um |brelia Mike? | after we've bownosd Judge Gary land put fam Gompers In his place, Ai then what? We've changed bossear is about all, and whether for the better is & question quite open to debate. ‘There te #mafl doubt that Labor cee, Little Mise Muffét Ate off a buffet. The old-fashioned man who buflt casties In the air now has a son who erects atmospheric celiars, . HONK! HONK! In the Tacoma marriage toensem: Albion Hudson and Alma D. Max- well? Went down to the beach, 'N wore a one-piece sult tis plated eee “Gee, ain't that woman Mirtle? “shortage in skirts, I'd say.” eee Mont of these jail birds startciitd a ROBIN. eee A man who claims he's rick these dayn in right in telling the doctor) he is ALE ing. eee Aa Rastos tells ur “Life ts fust a Pastime Just one pass after an other.” “Wonter what cate Chewo @iad waves down at the beach?” i? Saad “When one of these one-piece bat. “All men are Mars,” and women are |ing sult vamps goes by everything made up, Unions ha’ done a deal of good. \'They have thrown tho fear of the wrath to come into many & bone @ihead employer. They have their | place. Without them, and Yhe fear of them, L haven't the #lightest doubt \the stupid «entry who drift into the) management of millions, usually by) inheritence, would soon be setting up royal families in these United States, ‘talking about their divine rights and Colonsus, for to hbobenzollern is human. But the way out fn Industry ts not |the International Union of Labor on the one 4 nor the Combination of |Capitalints to fight it on the other ‘That is willy, It in a phase, It will |pase, It is Class nonsense, For no great insue was ever @ termined by fighting. All the steps forward of the human race have been by cooperation. The ideal and eventoal way of settling the labor problem is for em- ployer and employed to get together like the human beings they both are, and talk things over, | Up l otherwise bestriding the world like a| Hop right into the U1 eld sight-; finished eating they will jfecing bus, “Tis about to make the | ito the water and then have rounds of the bathing beach and we|aches when they get home. jahall neo what we shall see. Mave) Down at the water's edge & look! note four athletes, They know @ An we enter, that place on the tumbling tricks and they want |Mght (the one with the whitewashed world to know that they know ‘em. windows) ts where the gallant and| That girl in the pink suit ts the fair don bathing sults, (That's of the attractions of the beach. why the windows are painted) & look at her quickly—she's going to Folks who have no automobile with|be put off the beach shortly. It's side curtains could not go bathing In| against the law to wear the sea were it not for the bath /plece bathing costumes. She doesn’t house, “Oh, Justine, when expelled | know that now—but she will. |(oy copper) from the whady nook| ‘Tomorrow you will find the eame behind yon tree, make this thy dress |customers along the water's edge— ling place.” That, fair customers, is that is, the one’s we have noted te E. W. Clark, of Union Oil Co., Writes for The Star * *. * * &@ * * * Shortage Grows It te estimated that the United States now consumes 436,000,000 bar rela of crude oll a yea, while only ‘ barrela are produced commands ‘Shut up"! Seek out some quiet piace among the mountains or by the sea. Tuke|T?* leaves @ national shortage of which, if successfully Must sooner or later ex crime or burn slowly in| ol clothes with you and some good books—including at least one or | |two nature-study books. Make friends with nature from the start. Be outdoors all you oan. If you have a congenial vacation companion—one who will not bore you or expect to be entertained all the time—so much the better, Explore the countryside leisurely, observingly. Forget your work tn studying the ways of animal and insect life, the beauties of meadow and glen and rolling hillside Specialize in sunsets and also sunrises. Rival the farmer folk tn earty of sleep. And breakfast with them. it Please, at odd moments during the Gay. Lanching on of @ singing brook, it will be no surprise tf its music lulls you soon after you have eaten. The doze will benefit you. So will the loafing tin a hammock under pines, whither you perhaps make your way for a couple of hours’| reading in the late n. Possibly you will want to deo some fishtng. Poesibty you are ambt-| nearly 24,000,000 barrels, There are more than 7,500,000 auto mobiles and motor trucks in the United States, as compared with 700,000 tn 1911, ‘The consumption of California off {a emtimated at 110,000,000 barrels for this year, while only approximately 100,000,000 barrels will be produced, ‘Thin leaves an actual shortage of at least 10,000,000 barrels. In the year 1919 the total proées tion of gasoline in the state of Call- fornia was approximately 300,000,000 gallons The production for the year 1920 in eatimated at 400,000,000 gn ona. The estimated consumption of should either | tious to climb the mysterious mountain beyond which the sun sinks |the Pacific coast states for the year children in reading, writing. ts both feasible and most letter, I beg to inform you | &, according to a telegram receiv: | | by @ local Japanese newspaper, | Majesty the emperor of Japan| moved from Numadzu to Nikko, fis his usual summer piace.- the above telegram, it is to be d that his majesty’s illness serious, as he could move from | to the mountains. Yours M. HIROTA, Consul for Japan. THE PARTY BROKE UP club members were distinctly by the unending narratives of boastful hunter: “Reaching In- ia,” he continued, “I first met the iting tiger—” ! that’s nothing? said a mild man rising and making for “I once saw a man-eating rab- ‘ HE HIT IT RIGHT | ness is never the success. Never is he a leader, | rust that threatens to diminish the wheat crop. Do any or all of theme things {f ypu can do them without undue exertion. Amuse yourself as you please, provided only that the) amusing energizes, not devitalizes, you. That is the great thing, the all-important thing. it this year, which before its close may present heavily upon you, | . Who Thinks for You? “The citizen who does not do his own thinking today is no leas a traitor than the man who tried to evade the draft.” In those words George Creel pictures the duties of American citizen- ship. He continues: “In thia hour when the fate of democracy hangs in the balance, the criminal mind is the CLOSED mind.” The man who lets somebody else do his thinking for him tn bust- Seldom does he climb beyond the lowest rung of the Indder. But the man who does his own thinking does climb! He succeeds! If it takes thinking to be a/ successful business man, why should any, person tmagine that success in citizenship can be achieved by delegating the thinking to another —to politicians, for instance, to professional officeholders? That American citizen who doesn't do his own thinking overlooks that much of his rights and dodges that much of his obligations. Thin| is just as true if he lets big business do his thinking as it is true if he permits the Bolshevistic soap-box agitator think for bim, Do it yourself. Kanred have been concerned greatly in the recent weeks because of the red No sooner does t gloom thicken, however, than, lo! hope is born in Kansas, and the days of the red rust scare are seen to be numbered. ita smiling face, single head imported from Russa 14 years ago. Its yield averages five bushels to the acre more than other varieties. Half a million acres have been planted in Kanred wheat this year. | Millions of bushels will go for seed for next year's crop. It in ex: | pected a fourth of the hard wheat acreage in Kanaas, and large Dakota will be sown with Kanred this fall. No longer does the farmer | shirts and cord tires! es :At the Feet of Gamaliel » (Warren Gamallel Harding Is Conducting = Front Porch Campaign) ° BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE | * We used to go torching, but now we go porching, | {+z 2 ies Yes, he's probably right on In the water it's certain © «(There's a rhyme for « reader's regarding!) For wisdom is sounded, and crities confounded, . “At the feet of Gamaliel”—Harding, 3 Make any suggestion, or ask any question, (Though you're serving his cause, or retarding) And straight, man-to-man, sir, you'll get you an answer, id “At the feet of Gamaliel”—Harding. + . © Thus:-—“Do you Indorse it?” “And will you enforce 11?” . Or “What do you think of discarding Our whole constitution?” Hark! hear the solution o “At the feet of Gamaliel”—Harding. $A damp, or dry nation?” “Tho tax situation?” Or “Our Mexican watching and warding?” * Then let Solomon hush, and let Socrates blush, ‘sf “At the feet of Gamaliel"—diarding. . *“Who page fer your leases?” “What men are your bosses?” ¢_ Hey! that's personal, begging your parding! nese eBech impudent boldness discovers # cold ° In “the feet of Gamaliel”—Harding. 300 0 8 oo a « (Coprright, 1920,N.E A) ges cscacncen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . | tracts in Oklahoma,\ Texas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado and South look with disapproval on the college feller. Kanted is one of the reasons. | Think what untold suffering is caused by the outrageous price of silk! is entimated at approximately 000,000 gallons, CLAIM COST PRICES ARE LOWEST In view of these facts, Union Of company of California cloned tts ex- shortages gation for freight. The total deliv. ered price is 30.68 cents per gulion In addition thereto we must stand the shrinkage in transit and the extra cont of mtorage and distribution. COULD NOT CARRY LOAD WITHOUT EXTRA Cost For this reason we find stary to increase the price line under our Aurust 4, the price of our gasoline to the Consumer at baste distribuling points will be as follows Seattle, 28¢; Portiand, 29¢ (netud- ing state road tax); San Francisco, 37 Loa Angeles, 27¢. It would be ateolutely Impossible Remember always the true purpose of vacations, Realize that you | port offices early in the year, and haa|for Union Ofl company of California cannot afford to Wt any other purpose dominate—can least of all Afford| been making every possible effort to| to carry the load of the purchase and Problems weighing meet the oll, gasoline and distillate | transportation of this imported gaso- At the same Ume we have line without this increase in price. You have left your work for the time being in order to rest. See to attempted to retain on the Pacific! }it that you do rest. It is only fair that the public |coast the present low gasoline prices, | should know that the Union Oil com- Nobody will benefit more thereby than you. And you will be the which are lower than at any other | pany of California ts manufacturing | heavy loser if you so miaspend your vacation that you return to town | point in the entire world. But it has|and will continue to manufacture all feeling more fit for a sanatorium than for the job that means your|been absolutely impossible to supply | the gasoline possible from its availa- ivelihood. the gasoline required at the pres | bie supplies of refining crude oils, ent low prices. been strictly rationed, even thru the producing sections of California, Recently representatives of the various marketing companies, civic bodies and essential industries, were | Cha: called before the board of public utilt ties of Los Angeles for the purpose Automobiles have | and that it is not exporting any gaso- | Une from the Pacific coast, The board of public utilities of the city of Los Angeles, the Los An- geles Chamber of Commerce and the rt of Mines and Oils of Cali- fornin have made « thoro and im- partial investigation of the present of considering the present gasoline shortage of petroleum products and situation and determining how best! to handle it. At this conference we «tated that we could help to relieve the situa- tion by importing gasoline, or could | continue to sell only what’ was pos | sible for us to produce in Ubis state. ARE IMPORTING GASOLINE At the unanimous request of those interested, including the city of Los Angeles, we adopted the policy of importation. In pursuance of this policy we have purchased, and are now shipping from the mid-continent field, and there have already been Farmers, millers, grain dealers, and everybody else, who eata bread! shipped to us, seven solid train loada the their who seek further inf Arbor Day was first observed in Nebraska in 1872. underlying causes thereof, and findings are asvallabie to all rmation. All men want to be fair. That In, nearly all, Kick out the trouble makers, graftera, egotista and jack- anses, and jet the human beings in every plant clean thelr own door. step. ‘They are doing that fm many places, For instance, out in New Jersey the other day, the workers in a company, who run their own af- fairs in @ real industrial democracy, ton, to-wit: “WHEREAS, tt has been brought to our notice, thru printed propa | ganda distributed among us workers while on our way to work this morn: “WHEREAS, because of this rangement we have a fair and method for the arbitration of disputed points affecting our welfare; and ‘| mittee of our coworkers on @ basis of service rendered; and “WHEREAS, such wages are fur. ther augmented by a monthly bonus based upon production; and “WHEREAS, Mr. Walter C. Shoup —our president—had to our know! ledge consistenuUy refused various in Vitations from other employers of labor, including the National Metal | Trades Ansociation, to join with them for ‘mutual protection’; and “WHEREAS, such refusal, we feel certain, was based upon his utmost confidence in our joint ability to function properly under our Indus trial Democracy; therefore “BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that we urge you to serve your con- mituents by suggesting that they avail themselves of a similar mode of representation in their respective shops, ours having proven its abso- lute worth under all conditions.” After the reading of which we are prone to thank God that old-fash- joned Common-Sense and American containing 176 tank cars of gasoline. | Arrangements have been completed for additional shipments, The Union Of! Company of Call. this importation, to take care of its It is impervious to| proportion of the tremendous peak the rust, has few diseases, and is one of the hardiest wheats known. Hoaa requirements of the Pacific The Investor In Mortgages or Mortgage Loans should know that “The Insured Title Is the Standard Title.” When you buy a mort- gage or buy real estate, demand Title Insurance, and secure the full meas- ure of Title Protection which is your right. "Washingtn Tite Insurance Co. “Under State Supervision” For at the Kansas agricultural college at Manhattan, Kanred Ifts | fornia hopes that it will be able, by Kanred is a new kind of wheat, evolved from ¥) NOS ANGIANVANI 3 ZX We ATLANTA, GA. We DELICIOUS AND REFRESHING —the hit that saves the day. Demand the genuine by full neme— THE COCA-COLA Co. TRY ni 4; \ VIB NATE NGIES TB (ON 47ON EXTEN Mi NY RO WIPNVIE NVI a7 met and passed the following resolu: | the ery of the bath dwelling. Just ahead of us you will note the! beach itself. Those wild things run-| ning around haphazard, are bathers. | | They have just come out of the “be basketed™ bath house. And by “be- basketed” ‘tis meant that when all the rooms are occupied, the swim- your citizens clothes in. That's when you are di-| rected to a eorner instead of a pri-| Yate room, to dress in. You will please note the fellow with @ shingle in his hand He thinks he's an artist with wet sand. And that pile he is molding ls sup posed to be September Morn, tho it looks lke Mike, the old dray horse. Jum to the left of him there is & young coupla He's toning sand bathing sult. And he has been wear- ing oxforda (You know how ox fords affect one’s ankles) ‘That gathering down there by the bench is a family picnic. They are eating sandwiches with the emphasis on the “sand” After they have > vwwvww thousands of othe ABSOLUTE rate of Wwwwwwvewwwwewwveewe we Resources Puget Where Pi day. They live at the beach in the suromer time, Maybe they haven't got a home. End of the Ine All outt eee Ottver Me ciarted at the top, tetng © Surber You on the Road to Independence— By starting to Save here before to- morrow night you will earn a full five months’ dividend on January 1, and your Savings, with those of r of our Thrifty Members, will enjoy SECURITY For nineteen years we have paid substantial dividends intervals and never less than at the 5% PER ANNUM. at regular Now Over Four Million Dollars —— as Sound Savings and Loan Association ke Street Crosses Third