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THE SEATTLE STAR y CONDO | | EVERETT TRUE PUT YOUR HAT ON, EVGRETT— You'Re HALF NAKED?! Doctor Frank CRANE’S | 4 Pablianed Datty by The Star Publianing Cs “ =| The Seattle Star United ee 3 montha, $1.60; @ monthe, $9.76 Gervice Outside of the state, per month, By carrier, city, Le per week. By matt, ovt of otty, 60¢ per month year, 45.00, im the State of Washington. 44.60 for ¢ montha oF $9.00 per year Ah! vr who proposed to 243 women. At last we behold the feline hop-| The war sure t ia es. cannot make money here, if they cannot crowd out whites, they will is for that reason that The Star has been, and still is, in favor of Coun- lating the collection of restaurant garbage. At pres-|/) an Tindall’s bill regu pS control the collec ontrol the future of are no theories. it is the remedy? ss does not in | greatness in good-| 3 thenaeus. to the! or typewriter of paper on! © The Star: You want your B to grow up moral, honest, with real sympathy for their @nd 4 contempt for the vb tricky, the cruel. Of ‘want them thus to grow worth-while parent does ly careful, then, as to you let them gaze upon p this always in mind “Incredibly quick to Intuitively they grasp “ef much which you beyond their comprehen profoundly impression Because the critical fac undeveloped in them, they 0 ily imitative. make a strong tm: Minds and they tend ‘their it into action, They are| B at least to stow it away in ° of their subconscious, to remain as raw material for ter shaping. they learn more quickly, and d more readily, thru than thru any other ben, therefore, children are per- to feast their eyes on pictures immoral, vulgar, or other- it, there is a real dan- We have tried But wired the strange habit 4 . her ‘hag acq' up behind her nurse an the nurse savagely. does this, she says, because it is ‘funny’ to do it. But Goes not think it ‘funny, we” the child ts not exactly to "I pointed out to him. “Kick Fi is regarded as ‘funny’ by so-called comic artists. Your ile girl has probably been taking @eons from some of their draw- ” tolerate in the home no plo that may contribute to the dis of character, the inspiring of of cruelty, viclousness, or fear, be a cardinal rule with every Parents, likewise, should al Their children to attend no fe” theatres where such pic are shown. this, you may protest, would keeping the children away the “movies” almost altogether ‘would for a time—until moving producers awoke to the fact the enlightened parental censor. ‘was costing them money. We should have “movie re. n a hurry—the making of guaranteed to enlarge, not the growing mind and soul; tending to make good eiti- {not undesirables and neurotic f wells. ) And this, I know you will agree “with me, is a consummation devoutly be wished, It can quickly be ht about, if only parents will together to bring it about. AB. PREDICTED IT S AGO BAitor The Star: Keep your fight ing against the Japs. 1 de the good work you are ut 18 years ago there was a Jap oring man told my brother and I that in the course of time this whole ry Pacific coast would be all the same as Japan. | We were working for what was Be eo, at that time as the Kello; Ey r Co., and he was just a com * Mion laborer, like ourselves. A per- ‘pon would not think he knew any We are both ready to swear to it D. E. SMITH, ‘ash, Bobby (on his eighth birthday “My papa, whenever I'm tempted to do wrong I think of you and way,! writes to his absent father) greatness, || tion of 80 per cent of this garbage. In this manner the hog growing industry of King county. They are concrete facts. If the white people are to engage in hog raising in lthis county it is absolutely essential that the Jap’s Tindall bill would wipe it out. It would wipe it without any question. Indeed, that’s where the strength of the Tindall bill lies—and also its weakness. co | pletely dominate the situation, as far as hog raising | Jap interests to defeat the measure. Instead of hav- ing smooth sailing because it will master the situa- tion, it is meeting with obstacle after obstacle. But; in the end, it must win out. This commun- ity cannot supinely sit by and let the pro-Japs dictate things here. The economic happiness of the com- {munity demands otherwise. The Tindall bill is the acid test. It is the pioneer in the economic fight lagainst the Jap invasion. Its passage means the | first definite economic assault upon Nipponese pene- ‘tration. It means the beginning of the end of Japan- ese control, for what the Tindall bill will do for white hog growers, similar measures can do for other | industries. It may be that future presidential candidates will te the hichly specialized products that the city schools now are turning out—and food men they ought to be. But the country boy still is batting to @ high average in public life and the nominations of James M. Cox and Warren G. Harding have brought glory to the roadside Ohio hamiets jin which they were born. The old-fashioned American tradition that preferred presidents grown on farms seemed to have passed out with McKinley. Roosevelt was born in New York; Taft in Cincinnati; Wilson in Staunton, Va. The city-crown boy had come into his own at last, ft appeared. Put this year both major parties again have selected as thelr standard bearers boys who came from the soll; who lived thru thetr teens in tiny villages; who toiled on the land from early morning fo summer's dusk | who revive in their careers the old-fashioned tradition. The era that produced them is passing, as the youth of the farms respond to the alluring call of the cities, They are of that old fashioned “wed whose careers inspired generations of boyn to go forth likewise and hunt and seize opportunity afar when it was nowhere to be found in their own neighborhoods, ‘The future probably will give ws a different type of presidential candidates whose careers will be leas picturesque; fellows who will not be rough-hewn or selfmmade in the sense that Cox and Harting are products of thelr own making. But when they rise to fame there will be far leas inspiration tn their South America North American customs are reversed in parts of South America, In one district umbrellas are used only to keep off the sun. When the owner of an umbrella is caught out the umbrella up carefully to keep it from getting wet, Consider the La Paz district of Bolivia! There the more skirts a woman wears tion. The Argentine once had a frontier life no less picturesque than that of the United States. South America has many varied potnts of interest. Rut nothing there is of more interest than the rapid growth recently of its trade with the United States. A | For instance, Uruguay. | Only three vessels flying the flag of the United States entered the port of Montevideo in 1914. Last year there wore 154. Already this year the number ts 102, } A new transandean railway is being considered by the governments of Chili and Argentina, It would connect northern Chili with Buenos Aires, and would reduce by 10 days the time of shipr ot Amert | foods to interior Argent! by way of the Panama canal. The cost of this railroad would be $25,000,000, the greater her social dis tin an Regular Boys It is reported from their native villages that dates of the major parties were “just regul. jdid anything that marked him as an exc If there had been a guem contest the presidential candi ar boys.” Neither said or ptional fellow. as to which of all the boys In to be tial candidates, y would be Warren | their respective villages wor 1 turn | there would have been no way of telling wt jand Jimmy or Billy and Joe. | Very likely the’ guessers would | Just because of the common notion man must hav over his books |. The fact tm t pres ther t have given that n an exceptional boy wh up tn discouragement, an exceptionally successful who passed th astonished his elders with t the “regular boy” is more likely to t I-rounded |boy than the exceptional boy. Your tional boy is specialized boy, trained, or perhaps overtrained, in one $ His very mental superiority # him from his fellows so that ortunities for association which bring pluck, “to stand The “reg He is a mixer, all-around man lates for the hours poring r sage remarks. aw exce early separ there are denied to him thone of out the ip the qualities 6 * and abi “play hand, is no hot-hous s hammer him ¢ hed fact that both « regular boys should be comfc observing their boy absorbed in or will become of that boy.” ank goodness, madam, he's “just a regular boy.” Such fellows he knack of making a good job of thelr own destinies, | nelf-rellan: courage | the game flower r boy,” Contact presidency were : Dp wonder enta who, Y “what | Like Einstein's theory, there are only a dozen mental giants alive who | can, understand how Charles Ponzi made millions én international stampa That owija board the war department is using to locate Rergdolt must he a fake. WHY BE FAT? When I can reduce you a pound a day or more, safely, inexpensively and per- manently? NO DRUGS. NO WRINKL result of this way all you NO FLABBY FLE of reducing. You nr times a day or of reds of satisfied pati over the Northwest and Canada, If you are not perfectly satisfied with your health and figure, come and see me and I will set you right. Has a ay oat r if nts all Consultation Free, If you live out of the city and want your weight, write for FREE inform Women F ty ELIZABETH MARSHELLE Obesity Speet it 231-2 Yale Bullding, Corner Third and Union, Seattle, Wash, Willett 4202, Il] See ELIZABETH MARSHELLE in Pictures This Week at the Liberty Theatre control of garbage colleetion shall be wiped out. The), Because it will com- || {js concerned, no stone has been left unturned by pro-| in the rain with it he folds) le Jap question can be solved by making it economically unprofitable for | Ja ese to increase here, either in population or in the number of their | | i] | ‘Reds Fake BY J. 1. DUCKWORTH, REVAL, Exthonia.— (By courter to New York, by mail to Seattle. Industry in Moscow ix pragtically at 4 standstill, How then could privi loged guests of Lenine and Trotsky come out of Kussia and swear that they had seen mills working full biast? I had an opportunity to put this question to @ group of cotton mill engineers and “masters” (card ers, spinners and weavers, They lsughed at my ignorance. | “A correspondent or a labor dele fate comes to Moscow,” one ex | plained, “and asks to be shown some |milie at work. Certainly, Next [morning an affable comminsar arives |up to the hotel In an auto and takes the correspondent to a mill Of course only that amall part working ls shown. “Would the visitor like to see an- other mili? Yea, he would. So off they drive to another part of the town. Again only the busy part of | the mill is vinited, “Then when he returns to his own ountry he t how all the milla in Moscow are work He saw them “Not mere than 2 per cent of the m ope ration, And only a fraction of shops are in operation four & week on a four-hour day basis “These Investigators are the chepe 0 allow themselves to be deceived ing that the restaurants cht clubs in Moscow are all being run wide open because they have been taken around to gay places such as the private clubs of the commun “One day last year hundreds of men turned out *to’ clean up the atreeta, The electric ght was turned on in the neighborhood of Theater. |pl, Lublanka-pl, the Gostinni Dvor 4 Koonznesti Most. ‘Tramears ap- ared on the streets, “TWO ALLIED NEWSPAPERMEN HAD BEEN IN TOWN” “Were the good eld days return ing? No! After three days we went back again to dirt and darkness Then we Jearned that two allied newspaper men had been in town.” |, But back to the mills. The com- Mmunist leaders, ideplistio dreamers honest fanatics though they be, are undoubtedly doing their make tions for, the | workers at least bearable, But they |have neither raw material nor com t men to carry out their orders ywing facts I have taken sconomical an official f the highent cc people's and nm Ahe new American Advertisement, Columbia Colo beer—at Boldt SEATTLE 3% DAYS | THURS., FRI, AUG. 5-6 SHOW GROUNDS _| Fifth and Republican | More exclusive and sensatio than ever presented in Tickets on sale both days at Bash & Lane Piano Co. 1519 Third Ave. No Extra Charge 1224 -Third Ave: « MOR. UNIVE in the Moscow district are in, il of state | commiasaria ta, the | THEN HAVG "THE Goop MANNERY To TURN YOuUR HEAD THE OTHER WAY It! Mills to Show How Industry in Russia Prospers finance, food supply stores and ex- terior trade, In the textile industry the great | war largely cut Russia off from sup- | plies of cotton and machinery parts. | After the outbreak of the civil wer) imports became gradually smaller | until now they have entirely ceased. In 1911 the Russian empire bad 145 cotton and spinning mills | | Soviet Russia is left with 94 big cot ton mills, Most of the wo-called Rus finn mille are now in the new re publics of Poland, Finland, Exthonia, | Latvia and Lithuania. POPULATION IS SHORT OF CLOTHING The population of soviet Runmsda ts | about 50,000,000. The 24 million pairs lof socks, four million suits of under. clothing and 300 million arshines farshine—25 Inches) of calico planned |for this year i» not much for 80, 000,000 peopia. As Economical Life | pointed out. “It in hartly enough to cover the kedness of the soviet citizens.” ‘The outlook for clothing for the wuffering people of Russia is as black as the prospect of getting suf ‘fictent food, ' Daily Article A Capitalist. Mary Elizabeth. She Worked Hard. Learning Is Capital. One of the ntorios that should be added to the Goupel according to the United « of America ix that of Muy wth, the maker of the candy which bears her name, I no- ticed the other, day the announce at of her engagement to be mar ri I never maw hev in my life, but I wish her much jJoy—that she may live a hundred years and have scores of children. Hor real name tx Fivans. When her grandfather, who was a fudge in Syracuse, N. Y., died, the family was in need of a good deal of money. Little Mary Elizabeth was the oldest of four children, She wanted to do something that would add to the family income. Like @ sensible per non, she determined to do that thing which she could do best, In her case it happened to be making candy. As she could make better candy than any other girl she knew, she began making home-made confectionery, and sold it on orders, When she was 15 yearn old her business grown into a candy kitchen of which Syra. cune was proud, She continued do ing the thing that she liked and could do well, and she prospered. She has now an extensive business manufac- turing candy and is one of the mark- ed figures in the business world. It is not hard to account for her muceean, Her career illustrates two great principles: () Do what you like best to do, and (2) Do what you can do better than anybody eine. Mary Elizabeth is a good represen tative of the Capitalistic Class of this | country, #he worked hard, used her brains, mved her money, and now probably has a few dollar bank and owns a bond or two, In other words, her career {us trates what sheer bunk the talk about the menace of Capitalinm ta, All progress is the aceumulation of capital Wo uwually think that onty money or things with money-value can be capital. Hut Jearning ts capital ‘The apprentice learning how to run a locomotive ts storing up skill. capital. A tan’ reputation ts his capital. A politician's record ts his capital emtroy all capital, or redistribute it, and the very Ort thing labor would do would be to begin anew to create it For the very purpose of Inbor ts to ake capital, as the business of bees is to make honey. ‘Therefore, instead of picturing to yourself the Capitalist as a gentie- man with a buge abdomen and side whinkers, think of the Capitalist as this plucky Little girt fighting her way forward, making « success of herself and giving employment te many workers. And you'll be negrer the truth Anyhow, I cast my vote for any rirl that has sense enough, or whose folks had sense enough for her, to pick out, stick to and advertise a name as Wholesome and sweet as Mary Flizabeth. moral The cartiest altars were turf mounds, large flat-topped stones, or other rude elevations in the} ping out of the skillet into the con flagration! To elucidate—John D. the awful, tho not unexpec has bared 1, truth Koen ane a the up uvenward. One week ago it was thu Today the downtrodden | Onda himself viz motorist They are suggesting fish skin shoes to buck the high cost of foot wear, Why not bare skin? Pe A man eating shark i» not as holsy as @ man eating soup. eee Spare the rod and spoil the child Even the cow, the first thing it does | to its offspring ts to lick it . Tt seems as tho those fish fn schools don't know as much as them | that aren't. eee “Catch.” now that they have discovered one in |. ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine “Rayer Tablets of Aspirin™ ts) genuine Aspirin proved safe by mil- lions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only | an unbroken “Bayer package” which contains proper directions to relieve! Headache. Toothache, Earache, Neu- ralgia, Rheumatiem, Cold and Pain. 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