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The Seattle Star CU the ear Sry 04.50 for @ montha or 89.00 per year, aaty, Wee per month; 8 months, $1.60; @ montha, 92.18; yearn State of Washington Outside of (he stale The per month By carrier, ey Me par E. K. Brown---for Congress The fourth congressional district is exceptionally well favored in the can-| lacy of E. K. Brown of Ellensburg for the republican nomination for congress. | Brown is a fighter for the right—and, young man tho he is, he has fought in| , yo wars and in several A veteran of the Spanish American war, Brown lost no time in re-enlisting | political battle: m the big war began. Tho a man of family, a man with a valuable law. prac- he joined the very first American division to cross the ocean. He was on other side with General Pershing’s first command, and engaged in numerous ttles, rising to the captain’s rank. | x Lato and equity are two which ha but which man put asunder—Col- ers to the ; be ctf cas PY é Ah g 55 i i 8 - i & i i rs i B5za zg : ! i 5 & b i : | : t 28 if 5 $ i j fiz 5 . ° * # ry Hy “it F ? i ae i 5 iisf i tl Rss myself, the edict against was a terrible one, but now Know from bitter experience the of it No one loves a well d child any better than I do. altho I have tried them of al! and of both sexes, the six T have had this house, it has been my good fortune to meet ‘With one, and that is the reason we @annot afford the luxury of taking in our apartments, especial now that furniture is ut a pre- ALICE M. MEYER. eee Editor The Star: This direct pri Mary is a good deal like a much-ad | Vertived medicine—it has lots of kick A and not much cure. It stimu the citizens to register kicks the burdens of government doesn't seem to create any relief ‘rom. In fact, it seems to have the burdensand made more t to pay. The reason for that _ Seems to be that under the direct pri- | Mary system, the self-chosen candi- date for office searches his brain for gome new and startling idea to at ‘tract attention to his candidacy and | advertise his candidacy. Then when «he is elected, he tries to make goo @n his pre-election promises and ms; and inevitably these Bew and startling ideas of govern. Ment require a commission to in- a4 Bi Westigate, a commission to regulate | @nd inspectors and office heip and Tegulators, and that all costs money. ‘The money is obtained thru taxation. Bo the more we regulate, the heavier the burdens of government become. E. M. FARMER. PAXING BACK IN HIS OWN COIN Waiter—What's this, sir? Guest—Your tip. It’s a trow button I found in my beef stew. k The same spirit which led him as a boy to fight | | war and nearly 20 years later to fight for democracy, {brought him into various political battles for progress and justice. . i Brown is no hackneyed party slave. When the pro- gressive wing of the republican party revolted in 1912, Brown was with the progressives because he believed in the purity of the ballot and social justice. * Elected to the legislature as a progressive, he demonstrated upon the floor} of the house that he is a man of independent thought, a} man who believes in giving service to the people, and voting, according to conscience. As prosecuting attorney of his county, he gave evidence of fearlessness in office. The progressive party is no more. But men of Brown’s type who gave the progressive party the prestige it had, owned, cannot be downed. At the last state republican) convention, held in Bellingham this year, the republicans) —many of whom bitterly fought the progressives in 1912) —picked for their permanent chairman none other than) Brown. No greater tribute could the republicans have paid to the sterling qualities, to the leadership, and} to the ability of E. K. Brown. To be so recognized by men | whom he had met in political battle is, indeed, significant} of his worth. Republicans in the Fourth congressional district have an unusual opportunity to be well represented in congress if they nominate E. K. Brown. Human Interest One version of fust what constitutes human Interest and real neighbor. Iiness ie presented to Seattle in the spirit of kindliness and helpfulnems that West Seattle men and women have shown in their activities In behalf of the family of W. I. Herring which was made homeless Sun- day when fire destroyed their little home, Every one in the district has turned out to make the mother and her two chiliren comfortable, Help i# not given in a spirit of duty, but in An overflow of sympathy and an understanding for the unfertunate family, Work of raising funiis for the construction of the new home t#| being done with an enthusiast that extends to others, and the workers | are proving that they are real Westerners, with the real Seattle spirit. a Turn on the Aroma The designers of movie pictures have this design on their audiences, which cometh out of Los Angeles: “While sight and hearing are the only senses yet utilized, there ts & consensus of opinion that it will not be long until theatre managers secure certain effects on their audience thru the sense of smell, by | filling their auditorium with certain perfumes bound to awaken definite | Mines of reminiscence.” Well, we're ready for hypnotiam of our nose, as well as eyen anil) ears. Oft one sits with eyes and ears entranced while the nose is| taking In an atmosphere redolent with garlic, over-worn perspiration, and reform thru “certain perfumes” will be wel- We see the theatres advertising tpen nighta,” “Bay-rum matinees,” “Continuous .violet performances,” “Special attar of rose this week, with change to Jicky on Sunday,” etc, ete. The successful | theatre manager will be he who strikes what the public tikes moat to/ smell, and the fellow with a real bad ree! can hold ‘em by squirting a little chloroform into the circumambient atmosphere. The ideaa of awakening our “definite lines ‘of reminiscence” by an for Cuban liberation because he believed it a righteous | e THE SEATTLE STAR EVERETT TRU BRAINS Can See hat, Ny Cane ER TICL 8 BRAINS CAN Soe AT RIGHT, FOR DOGSN'T Swe! Sipue Say “Vericy, VerRicy, Ih ANT MAN m= VERICY, VERILY, S GTICSD THAT THE OnLy vse You! Make de Hs BIBLE 1S TO FORTIFY WEAK ARGUMBNTS UTH QUOTATIONS FROM IT, ANO NING TIMGS OUT CF TEN THE QUOTATION SN'T THE REMOTE ST, IBSARING ON WHAT VAS CaN as NOUR TALKING is | | | } H. Addington Bruce Writes for The Star Today on Self-Control The man who appreciates that he|to refuse to allow them to stampede ja short in self-control, and has a real one tnto a fever of anger or anxiety, dexire to overcome this deficiency, |that the foundations of self-control should begin by schooling himself to} may most surely be Inid, meet calmly the small vicissitudes of| my after day, the first thing on Ufe. Seta gn the uncontrolled should Not only does the old maxim, “Ie | @ay to themselves with emphatic re who is master of himself in little | iteration, even if necessary going to things will be master of himeelf in| the length of putting their assertion big things,” hold true, but only thru | down in writing: selfmantery in little things can selfs} “I know that somethingsts goin mastery in big be asnured. And each |to occur today calculated to annoy passing day offers opportunities for) mo. Something always dows. I will the Recessary schooling in selfcon-| not let it catch me unawares, will trol, jot let it draw from ine expressions, “Hetween dawn and nightfall, day)or even indications, of irritation, after day, something vexatious and | worry, or fear, annoying ia bound to occur. “Whatever happens I will main The train may be tate, the post-|tain a calm demeanor, I will not man slow in delivering the mati, the |*nart or frown or show an undigni cook may burn the toast or ruin the | fied uneasiness, 1 will recollect that bacon. clothes by 4 careless driver, the wind | may bear away one's hat, a lubberly | must be frankly added, it a impossl tout may bump into one turning a ble that this good resolution will he corper | Kept to the full from the outset the office routine, business papers | to time. may be strangely missing ae the re sult of a clerk's negligence, the usual solf game in the afternoon may be prevented ence the trivial will som or late be com |control hag been gained really fitting aw campaign when we're seated, after paying the beautiful lady at the box office our war tax, touches us delightfully, t How de licioug to sit there with senses of sight and hearing absorbed by picture and orchestra or wind organ and our olfactory sense reminding us of how we got even with cross old Aunt Kate and her woolly poodle, that time, in far away, innocent boyhood days, when we borrowed dear! fittle Fido tosdig out a rabbit and put him into a polecat’s burrow, by mistake. Ah! the aroma of that blessed reminiscence clingy to us to! this day, and is probably still clinging to Auntie and her Fido! Yea, indeed, if they're going to serve up reminiscent odors, we're going to be! there much oftener when the curtain goes up on “Ladies who don't remoye thelr hats probably wear wigs,” and the lke. : A Big Idea! ‘The report that the prohibition candidate for president doen the family | washing should suggest to thoughtful politicians a useful idea for future campaigns, It is not recorded that either Cox or Harding are handy men about | the house, but, with 17,000,000 women voting, the politicians ought | readily to see the advantage that will accrue to a candidate in 1924 who can announce himself thus: FOR PRESIDENT: John Jones He Dries the Dishes for His Wite Every Evening His opponent, not to be out-liustanded, probably will counter with something like this VOTE FOR John Smith He WASHES as Well as Dries the Dishes Every Evening This practice, If untversally observed by national, state, county and} municipal candidates for office, ought to prove highly beneficial to| married life. Whereas, at the present time men prepare for public office by learn. ing how to make speeches and mixipg with the boys at the cigar stores, the future will find them at home of evening soaking the clothes for the next day's washing, minding the baby, washing the dishes or doing something else to boast of in the campaign for women’s votes, Thus, elections will become contests between good husbands and the victory will go to the beat, it is to be hoped. The irresistible influence of good example will filter into many homes and we will become a nation of helpful husbands. Then one more credit can be cHalked up to the manifold virtues of women's suffrage, Self-Sacrifice Once there was a man who lived for his family. He was interested in all they did and proud of their successes. He stayed at home at night, and liked to spend his evenings with them. He spent very little money on himwself, and worked bard every day to give them all that heart could desire. But still It that they did not have speculate to ma money for them faster drop in the world. And then he worked all the harder to make up for the bad judgment by which he had robbed them. But the strain was| too great and gradually he began to feel that the burden he imposed on himself had been imposed by them and he felt a little hurt and began to keep out of the circle. he enough, and he began to That led to failure and a | And then he felt that he wasn’t wanted In tt and he began to resent their happy life with each other, and when he saw them talking quietly together he felt #0 much left out that it looked to him like plotting they were all conspiring against him—and he began to threaten. And that helped to kill their love, And so things kept getting worse until family life was at an end, and the people in all the world that cared the mont about despised him, and he knew it. worse agony than that, If he hadn't tried so hard to do it all himself they would have ‘all | been happy still. Self-sacrifice is as bad as selfishness when it becomes @ fixed idea. And theré is no Good news for all poor prunes. Prunes are to be cheaper. France's recognition of Raron Wrangel put a new angle in the Kuro; Y a tangle. Written by a poet. an Franklin Roosevelt's strenuous apecch-making tour shows he has a fam- fly trait or 40 in his makeup. Pon pictures of the political writers convince one that both Harding and Coz are yood to their folka, lke theme are of no pafticular mo- | testa ment, Certainly they do not cail for | ejaculations of surprise, and dinp-| self-control pointment; should not cause fussing | without and fuming. first they produce on persona of seant| habits of control deficiency will per ‘ontrol. And it ta by training one's self to meet such occurrences calmly, s=———We'll Say S0————= TODAY'S BEST BET; What! regivtered yet? . ' over the trivial, Not! prices were about lower,” advertines @ 100 per cerit oe A correspondent of the Chicago ing. Trib is responsible for the follow- ing | “A slogan shoul have mt and rhythm. One cannot make a slogan t of Harding and Roosevelt Cox and Coolidge It is better and CooMdge! Cox and Codi | Seven per cent and no damned) foolidge!” | confidence in John than in Ponzi that John .D. it with anybody. . D. A soda fountain in Salina, Kan. | blew up the other day, Two years | ago an accident Hke that wouldn't have aroused a single suspicion, cee eee Did you see the sporting goods ad, “One Third Off—All Women's Path nabs canal ee The people of Warsaw must be. Ren Ramsey, amateur ornitholo.| eve there is significance in a name. gist, climbed a tree to a woodpeck roe er's hole to see what waa in it. This| The home brew was at a picnic Tuesday. verting many a q He came down #0 fast he left halt * Corker. his coat up the tree. A friend asked, | “What was in the hole, Ben?" and} he said, “A woodpecker!" is con- w into . . Five (German warships have reached this country, to be exhibited and then sunk, We don't know what [I have put myself on cuard against Mud Ynay be splashed on one'n | myself, and will behave accordingly.” In the case of the uncontrolled, tt & tardy stenographer may delay | There are sure to be allps from time But, persevering, the conquest of pleta And it will be found that in by a protracted confer-|conque¥ing the trivesl a degree of To the self-controlied, happenings one to meet mantully the severest of Whereas, by endeavoring to securn in critical emergencies acquiring controt in| | merely vexatious situations, no head-| , hibit a German warsht These are preciesty the effects| way whateveh can be made. The oid | <4 o% exh! > nist, kept alive by the foolish fretting | Chicago firm.| ‘They ought to sell for next to noth- We always had a great deal more Rockefeller And one reason is never offers to divide Doctor Frank | CRANE’S | Daily Article (Copyright, 1) Meet at Phillipi. Bolshes Not Nation Thef/re a Sect U.S. Sulking. It is pretty hard to know the truth about Kussia. The situation is concealed by prop jaganda and manifest les as tick as | fiiew about @ garbage pail. | The first ding the Bolahegiks aa |was to take over Ufe age » of | public information. Since then it haw jbeen a war in the dark, One or two things, however, stand out clearly, as promontories in the | | fom. The mad rulers of Russia have plainly stated and widely advertised | | their aim. What they want to do} | we know, by evidence, not of their) enemies, But from (heir own mouths And what they have plainly de jared, over and over again, is that thelr object i# not to restore their own country to peace and order and live it @ place in the wociety of | nations; they are not nationalists, they scorn #0 provincial a passion as patriotism, ‘Their object ts to revolutionize the | world. Russia just happens to be their! pirat. ‘They are conquering wier to sovietize Poland. They don't want to add it to Rus dan territory. They are not inter ented in territory, They want to add it to the realm of proletariani#m. When they finish with Poland they will tackle Germany, not to conquer Germany-—the whole ter minology of war must be altered— but to free Germany from the tyr anny of Capitaliom. They are busy in the Fast, and there perhaps they have @ more favorable field. They will what they can to alienate fr Britain ber colonies, simply because Great Britain ts the stronghold of democracy. ‘They hate democracy, according to their own statements, They have no particular objection to autocracy, for they themecives are an autoo racy. ‘They are as utterly devoid of mor. als and humane sentiment ad were the Germans in Belgium. And asthe Germans sacrificed everything, even to decency, treaties, honor, and humanity, for the great od Deutechland, #0 the Bolshevik! gaily commit every hideous crime in the calendar if they can only establish their fanatical creed. They are not a nation, they are a wet Sooner or later, unless it falls to! Poland in munt be faced andgfought by the civilized nations. + We can keep out of this row no more than we could keep out of the! war with Germany, France, Italy, Great Pritain, and) the rest of Europe are doing what | they can to ntay thin red menace, America, sick and sullen with par- timnahip, is sulking in its tent. Sooner or later we will have to line up with the sturdy hanesty and | sound sense of Lioyd Gearge, who sald to the Bolsheviki government in his recent speech: “If you get e) real desire for peace you can have it. but ff you are out to challenge the institutions upon which the lb- erties and civilization of Europe de pend, then we shall moet at Phil ippirr makes, but it's a first-class article when you're looking for something to sink. ¢ eee Quite Another Thing. Ralph Firestone, who was acquitted by @ jury in the elreult court, was not charged with stealing an auto: mobile, as stated. The charge was }merely of taking a car that did not | belong to him.—Goshen (Ind) News. oe Mr. Ponzi would have avoided nis| present difficulties if he had thought! to provide himself with a pubifc | utility franchise . ‘That raw recruits are sometimes not #0 raw as thelr officers think is proved by an incident that took | Place in a certain barracks, reports Col. W. H. Inglis. A recruit was on sentry duty for | the first time, and the officer of the day, with his wife, his daughter, and his dog, was passing. The sentry called: “Who goes | there?" Thinking to puzzle the man, the of. flcer replied promptly “Captain Jon wife, daughter, The recrult hesitated only an in stant, and then said curtly: “Captain Jones, advance and be recognized! Wife and daughter, mark time! Dog, stand at ease!" “We purchased those woolens when THE TITLE TO YOUR HOME HI subject of Title Ineur- ance is one of general tn- terest because sooner or later almost every one has the am bition to become the owner of a home. When that ambition is attained the question of the means by which the title may be made absolutely secure is of paramount importance, is addin our Mem to TS Title Insurance provides a guaranty not only against title loss but against title Liti gation, DIV In buying demand our pol icy. Washington Title Insurance Co. Under State Supervision Assets More than $600,000.00 Hours: 9. 4; and SUCCESSFUL This is the record of the past nineteen years—a record that SAFE because of careful, wise control by able conservative Officers— SUCCESSFUL because our Members Savings have never earned less than a 3% Puget Sound Savings & Loan Association Where Pike Street Crosses Third the number of every day : | PER ANNUM DEND Saturdays 9-1 and 6-8 AS IT SEEMS TO ME DANA SLEETH WONDER how many of us|Japanese corps before the armiatios good Americans, Who two | declare that Japan mate no concesk years ago hated the| ment of its sympathy with Ger “Hun” with @ hot endur-| and desire to make alliance with hee, ing hate, today look with| Officers and men who fought be poevish mien upon our little collec | wide the Japs are unanimous in de tion of marks and wonder why the|claring that the Jap, when he hag allies won't let Germany raise an|a chance, @pilis his venom at every army big enough to stop the Bol | white man, and many a grim litte pheviki, and get her money back to| skirmish between the Jap and Ames par and make us @ lot of loose /fean squads occurred in the Siberiag change. wilds, Probably more American eltizens| As the Japs had the ranking off} today can «ympathize with interna ors and the American forces were tional bankers, who scurry about in| really under the command of the diplomatic circles trying to cover) Jap generals, there wan a fine chance various golden eggs thah ever be-| to see how the oft-boausted exteem of fore |the sons of Nippon for America Probably the beet amurance that worked, when there was nothing te Germany has that this country will | be gained by friendship: and without not favor any too rigorous terms im: | exception contempt and bitter malb posed upon her by England nd | clous enmity marked the Japs, high France are the billions of marks and/and low, in their relation with not German bonds scattered thru the|only the American soldiers but the country. French as well. Beratch the back of this new in-| The Jap ‘» wily, and suave, and ternational spirit of amity for recent|he thinks he is clever, but he is toe fors and you will find selfishness | selfish and too bigoted and too blind right under the hair, ly egotistical to conceal his real eee spirit when there ts no need, and IMLY « lot of us thought| whether it be a doughboy from st we perceived how to make | beria, @ missionary from Korea, or some easy money without |@ commercial traveler who has been work, no we took little fly.| trying to get a square deal in Tokia# ers in foreign eurrency,| you will only get one opinion as to foreign notes, foreign bonds, and|the real character and ambition of = Grgat | now we find that we bought on « falling market rather than @ rising one, and that work ts, after all, the best dividend producer, s We had @ hunch in our small way that the misfortunes of the test of the world would make for our prow | perity, and now we discover that there ts a strange reluctance on the part of bankrupt Europe to imme diately repay its obligations ten for one Tough luck; but when you try to make more than seven per cent on money, you take chances, and what | the avernge man doesn't know about Investments isn't, I eaid this some months’ago, when everybody was buying marks at! $2.60 and bonds at $33.00, and I take! great pleasure in saying it again, | and in calling your attention to the! attractive prices at which you can the Jap. And of the ten thousand men from every state in the union that formed this Russian expedition you will do well to discover one who favors the adminsion for ten minutes of a Jap to this country on any pretext. The only excusers of the Jap are those who do not know him, and the chief apologists for the Japs are hired pleaders, no matier whether they be frocked or no. It has taken the Jap only tea years to turn the esteem of this country into eternal dislike, and he has done this all by himself by mere ly being himeelf whenever he had @ chance.’ Even the Prussian could de no better at turning friends inte enemies, . Columbia Colo—The new Americas beer—at Boidt's —Advertisement. ———_ $$, pieces from it# own rottenness, it | 5 ous, mentally alert, fine and ‘chance of living up to 80 ‘of us can stay the years nor ull buy those Liberty bonds which you let go of to invest in the Hun lemon, or the fake oil stock, or the bunk gold mine, or the whatever it was that nicked you. With the entire world crazy, the only place to invest your spare change is at home, and the nearer |home you invest the more chance is| “Aflertka has been worth fts there of seeing your, money again. | weight in gold to me It bas CURED Did I take my own advice? Cer-| fy constipation and — serious bowel tainly not, durn it. trouble which I had.” (Signed) Mra, bd tad Anna Wagner. N THE last few months 1) Adlerika Mushes BOTH upper and have talked with several |lower bowel so completely it relieves officers and men who were |ANY CASE gas on stomach or sour members of the Siberian|stomach. Removes a surprising expedition, that for many amount of foul, decaying matter Adler-i-ka Again! | months hibernated in Russia mark-|from the alimentary canal (which ing time. Two Urings all these men | polsened stomach for months.) Often agree on: One, that Russia is Bol-|CURES constipation. Prevents ap stevik! meray because the mass of |pendiciti. The INSTANT pleasant the people have no chance of ex-|action of Alder-+-ka astonishes both pression; the othen that Japan de-| doctors and patients. It is a mixture tests not only Americans, but every of buckthorn, cascara, glycerine and white race, the only exception being | nine other simple ingredients. Swift Japan's affection for Prussianixem. | Drug Co. Bartell Drug Co., and all Officers who were attached to the! leading druggists. ES, egret Tt business each on the transcont 0 save @ day way nant joumnay Se car pesera- gers only to provide them with word in comfort and service—that is the purpose of this most excellent train of the world’s greatest The Trans-Canada Limited which leaves Vancouver every afternoon eastbound, and Montreal and Toronto every evening westbound, from cne coast to the other. Made up of dining car, standard sleepers, compart ment and compartment observation cars, this train takes you through the most spectacular scenery @€ the Canadian Pacific Rockies by daylight. For full information write, or call at this office Det ESET 4 Ten Years Younger Than His Years Doesn’t it make you feel good—cause you to straight- sn up and feel “chesty”— when someone guesses your age at ten years or so younger than you really are? You look into your mirror, smile with satisfac- tion and say to yourself: “Well, he didn’t make such a bad guess, at that.” The point is: You're no older than your vitality. If a man is strong, vigor- mence at once to restore your energy, strength and endurance by taking a The Great General Tonic his master body-builder wil fou keep yor in spirit m | piiysical ection, because it will assist Nature in maintaining your vitality atpag It enriches the blood, restores worn-out tissues, duces sound refreshing sleep, sharpens tite, tones up the digestion—in short, will put new life, new vigor ‘and new vim in every fibre of your body, You will be surprised how fit at 50 he has a better than a man of 80 who is weak and run-down has of living up to 60. While none stop time, we should all make an heroic effort to suc- cessfully resist the effects jof time by ever keeping our vitality at par, When you sense a feeling of slowing down of your physical forees—when your stomach, liver, kidneys and other organs show signs of crisinal gocts. jeture tituten, condition. ® bottle from your druggist Rei ¥ Sole Manufacturers LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY weakness—when you notice a lack of your old time “pep” and ‘‘punch’’—in agher words, when you feel your v tality is on the wane, you should com- New York Kansas City, Me For Sale at All Druggists—Always in Stock at the Owl Drug Company ood in tated