The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 28, 1920, Page 6

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The Seattle Star [== Pubdliening y month; 8 monthe, $1.60; @ monthe #276; year, Phone BESS se Pe Stoke OF, Wiammingten. Outs Sf the eteta, Wee per teenth 4.60 for € montha of $9.00 per year, By carrier, city, Me per week. | Postmasterships Hawiley’s married his cook.” | hree years ago he was a mere mailman. Today, he is postmaster of Port- hips as well as others, we are informed. | warding party ward heelers. The postmasterships » LIFES ae . 8) Fine! Now let us go farther in this direction. Let us ty? influence of partisan politics, Rot! be called sinking funds. Some they weren't merely trying to play a game. There isn’t any ocrats, but because they are men or women of different It is, therefore, an optimistic sign that postmasterships |if presidencies and con: ° ° A Bolshevik Split fuccess of the Bolsheviki in stifling uprisings against themselves, anti- in allowed to make peace with the world so that they oan have time) re tetner Sekt an eat.” | Bolshevik himself. He ts President Pilsudski, of Poland. Piludskt was it he has nothing on Cox. The) pomb was his weapon, as it wae Lenine’s He and Lenine were) hundreds of tives wrecked) auring the war, Pilvudski fought as a general in the Austrian army, | |many years before. The responsibilities of hia presidential office in! d. The promotion came, not thru political favoritism but because of merit was due to the new civil service rules which govern first class postmaster- “It is certainly high time that these promotions should be made in this man-| : 2 ner instead of the old rk barrel” system of re-! 2UCH i i . 1S ought not to be up for barter and sale by the political parties. And now, so we are informed, they are not. maid the Pickford famity| also remove the collectors of revenue, U. S. assayers, and a & press agent to get page one|few dozen other officers of this kind from the baneful wiih: bake Democrat? Republican? They’re of the same hue, bank accounts these day! made of the same cloth, and would think the same way if substantial difference between them. If they do differ in any respect, it isenot because they are republicans and dem- \temperaments. Republicans differ as much amongst them- selves as with democrats, and so it is with democrats. are no longer to be handed out on republican or democratic grounds. It would be a mighty fine thing for the country well as constables and sheriffs, were decided in the same non-partisan way. Another outbreak aguinst the Bolsheviki has occurred tn Russia, It has been suppressed as have all the previods ones. But, despite the soviet revolts continus, | Eventually, the counter-revotution wil work !ts way, tf the Russtans to study the inefficiency of the soviet xystem of government. | The most determined enemy of the Bolsheviki in Europe was a former an associate of Lenine long before the war, when both fought aguinst may have played the cor: | czarism. Pilsudski then was a communist and a direct actionist. The has twp newspaper Ee ge = from Russia in 1905. | Py Pilsudski's hatred of the czar was even greater than Lentne’s, For, ! st. N. Y., daily, and not) gcainst Russia, After peace came, he returned to Poland and repudiated tae bomb, either. |the soviet revolution which he and Lanine had worked to establish jey claim that artists are married | 01.53 sotere’ him. He broke away from the Lenine influence and) ont. is now Lenine’s bitterest foa. a that’s why they can’t get Rg with it and have to do other | time comes. Since the Rolsheviki seized the Russian government, their major responsibility bas been to prevent alien enemies from conquering Russia. That is why Lenine has been allowed to continue his ineffective efforts to substitute class government for popular government. But, let Russia have peace and the conditions confronting Lenine will |change. He will then have to repudiate his own doctrines himself, or Pilsudskis will arise within Russia to repudiate him and bring abo’ the establishment of democratic rule Profiteers “Lat vigorous measures be adopted to punish speculators and exter you speak Chinese” Dut I can talk politics, which would have done exactly as they do if he were tn their shoes, have never been heard to quote him on the subject of profiteers, He minced no words He called profiteers “a tribe of black gentry,” .| who “work more effectually against us than the enemys arma.” “It is much to be regretted,” he added, “that each state, long ere this, has not hunted them down as pests tp society, and the greatest enemies we have to the happiness of America.” ij Which of the major parties would have accepted George Washington ” said her mother, “why | had he come to the conventions with that sort of a plank? your small brother} It is not difficult to fancy certain Uving statesmen, patting Washing. ling?” ton on the back, and saying: “Your plank is just the thing, Mr. Washington, the very thing! you and he/|can w@ afford to antagonize * * ©? . And Washington probably would have stopped them right there, and anewered: “We can afford to take any stand that’s rightr But @ man with an old-fashion- ir of plain non rimmed glasses | No, dear reader, a Rhodes scholar ts not one who mastered the Ca lyon & spectacle these days. pin. Young republicans will hear Bavidge talk Thursday noon Getting tired of tame topics? “Explosion Shakes Cork,” said news head yesterday. That's nothing. Explosion would shake lead, too. Democrats name Taylor as county chief. Hoping, ne doudt, he can sew things up for the Bourbons, =. Australian premier ts injured by horse. If the premier rode tt for safety, how the flivvers must be chortling. Edith May ts America’s most beautiful salesgirl. Edith may go om the stage now Then again, Edith may not, Btate prohibition law ts being attacked, A successful attack on grohi- Banks is a jolly young gob Vition would mean an awful booze punishment th @ seamanly, swaggering -- “Gov. Coz Escapes Wreck,” says news head. It’s up to Benator Harding now. He'll have to parachute out of an airplane, or something, to keep up gait, his merry salt air raises hob u the pace. the girls, makes their hearts ____palpitate. lassies that love him can’t guess ‘Phat his deck is a hard barracks floor, The dest thing that could happen for the voters would be jotnt debates between the candidates for governor. They'd get a square look at ‘em in 4 one sitting. But what's good for the voters tan’t often good for the poli- learn from his fervent caress tictans, | hat he’s done all his sailing we j ‘ashore. Writing about the campus, Sam Milton remarks on the color of the eee tables and chairs in the common painted green, “probably to represent the Wowadays the nutting season 1s| state of mind the freshman ts constantly in.” You don’t have to know limited. It starts a day or so| Sam to know he is no freshman. No, sir, not he. = = “ASPIRIN” if from all your loose change @ quart or two of nuts. Im those happy nutting days of almost every other kid fell out WARNING! Unless you see the name “Bayer’’ on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 20 years and proved safe by millions. Name “Bayer’’ has same meaning as 14 Karat on gold. tree at least once each fall im the fall, get that, and gave family physician a chance to & bit of money while it kept a out of school for a week or But these days a boy stands no , of tumbling out of a walnut tree, for all the walnut has been d up into tables and chairs. eee ——— ‘ : jis. j ~ or Yd =, = we lla’n sweet patootie that she’s a wondrous beauty; her bobtafled tresses her futuristic dresses. he finds her features blobby, her ride her Red, Red hobby. fa blinder than they say. @ fellow gets that way. cee — SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an “unbroken package” of genuine ‘‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,’’ which contains proper direc- tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheuma- tism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and for pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents—Larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayor Manufacture of Mononceticacidester of Balicylicacla ‘9 always room at the top, u’re liable to be pinched as the “higher up.” ¥ * EVERETT TRUE ScrRisser, I TO SE LATCST Nover. TIMS AGO-e THE SEATTLE STAR By CONDO | tg CAMG IN ov ABOUT YOUR “TMS 1S THE COPY OF IT WHICH I BOUGHT A SHORT, oF course! {I tere TO, BUT YOU STUCK, IN MANY UNTRANSLATED FORGIGN PHRASGS THAT YOU KILLED THE STORY YOUR NEACT ONG ALC IN ENGLISH YOUR. READERS WiLL BELIGVS WOU REALLY ARE smart!” Doctor Frank CRANE’S Daily Article (Copyright, 1920) Democracy. The Challenge. Minorities. Riding to Fall. So will the counterrevolution happen tn Russia when the proper Democracy ls a way of govern. | ment, Ita machinery ts Intended to em able the majority of the people to wet what they want. It t# the only plan of government that seeks this end. It doom not al ways attain it, but tn the nature of the case tt is the only one that ap- proximates it, since no other plan alms at ft. idem, theory, echeme or movement, which has for its object to impose the will of a minority upon the poo- ple ts democracy’s foe. It makes no difference whether uch @ conspirator te a hereditary monarchy, & bureaucracy, @ cabal, a party, or any other person, weory or opgantzation, * whole and sole point ta, that & minority, elther by violence or scheming, seek to control the govern- ment. ‘Tho gist and core of democracy is that stated by LAncoln, “a govern. ment of the people, by the people and for the people.” When, therefore, the British labor unions imwue an ultimatum to the government that unless it does thus and so the industry of the nation will be crippled, it is precisely as much a tyranny as tt would be if & kaiser declared that he would en- force his personal will by an army. Lioyd-George stated the issue tn plain terms. “The elected represent. DR. J. R. BINYON ree Examination BEST $2.50 Guasses on Earth ‘We are one of the few optical stores in Northwest that really grind len: from start to finish, and we the only one In SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. Examination free, by graduate op- triat. Glasses not prescribed absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVE, Between Spring Phone M. Cocoanut Oil Makes a Splendid Shampoo If you want to keep your halr tn food condition, be careful what you wash it with. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall, This dries the ecalp, makes the hair brittle, and is very harmful, Mulsified cocoanut of] shampoo (which is pure and en- tirely greaselows), is much better than anything else you can use for shampooing, as this can't possibly in Jure the hair, Simply moisten your hair with wa- ter and rub it in. One or two tea- spoonfuls of Mulsified will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hatr and scalp thor- oughly, The lather rinses out easily and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, flufty and easy to manage. You can get Mulsified cocoanut off shampoo at most any drug store, It is very cheap, and a few ounces is enough to last every one in the fam- ily for months, gist gives you Mulsified Be wre your drug. |} sUves of the people do not count,” | declares the labor group. Hence, | they propose to substitute the soviet) | for parliament, ” declared the premier, “iw ef the most formidable chal! without hesitation every munt accept the challenge. | | ‘That in the issue behind every at-! | tempt by strikers to get thelr own | way, not thru thelr regularly elected representatives, but by coercion. | | By sticking to this program labor | leaders are riding to # fail. | | ‘¥hru many long years the people have gained what liberties they have. | They are not going to give them up for any tyrannical scheme, even one | that talks of justice and the rights) the patient courses of nature will not/my entire time to my | be mollified, and that in the end man | dental practice, I make Our government may be faulty, tm wilt pay for every seeming victory | al)’ examinations and of men | efficient, even venal. But we choke) | it We elected tt. And if we don't/ } like ft we can elect another. | It ts proper and commendable for | labor to organiza, to secure the elec tion of representatives favorable to Any man or group of men, any) its cause, to bring any pressure of | and ever pelf-enforcing. public opinion they may be able to! create to bear upon legisiatures, but | when they resort to threate of “db rect action,” which means injury to the body politi, it means that they | intend that the government shall be | run by @ compact minority, and not | by @ majority. And this te the death of democracy V, teaspoon salt \% cup Mazola 4 tablespoonsful one double pie | Comy New York City, “enables the manufacturers to boost | cates this natural order by his ca PIE CRUST - 1% cups sifted flour Y, teaspoon Baking Powder Sift dry ingredients. Add ‘water to Mazola and beat untilcreamy. Mix quickly into dry ingredients. Toss on toslightly floured board and roll to desired thick- ness. This recipe makes FREE new hand- somely illustrated Corn Rroducts Cook Book contains 64 pages of cal and tested recipes by ex- pert cooks. Froe—write to- | day. Corn Products Refining | ye P. O, Box 161, AS IT SEEMS TO ME DANA SLEETH EWA of the man who ta! ready with his promises or cock ure of the future. For the wivest man alive can hardly guess with rew sonable accuracy the outcome of the most simple situaden, If one thing was considered true by wets and dryp allke, it was that! national prohibition would ruin the wine grape grower, the hop «¢ . the brewer and the distiller, And it wae held out that the ruin of these | industries and pursuits was & neces: tary but minor loaw in the cause of national sobriety. | Put the wine grape growers and the hop growers never knew what prosperity was until prohibition be came established, When the grape growers had to depend on the winer- lon for their market, they sold their grapes for $10 a ton. Now that we are “dry.” wine grapes are worth from $60 to $120 @ ton, there is a na onal market established, and the do mand exceeds the supply. In the old days, Mcent hops were bonanss hops for the grower, but to- days hope are hitting 40, 60 and 60 conta, and longterm contracts are being signed by foreign brewers, ‘The yeast business has a boom that prices 300 per cent, and it is not ar gued that the wives of the naUon are #0 increasing the homebaked bread supply &# to gobble these tons of yeant. Prohibition bronght prosperity to almost every one connected with the Uquor business, and millions have been made by distillers from stored stock sold for “medicinal” purposes. When a commodity increases in a) twelvemonth from 26 a quart to) $26, thone who have a supply of that commodity are likely to do well. And they have, and they are, and |, UNUl present stocks are | nature's course and have exact jum | them, but | at all spit on the sidewalk. and If these vital laws were always administered the same by officers, | /}\k Juries and judges everywhere, and if ||) the pénnilems debtor had the same re course a the mont charming heiress, we might approach the certitude of tice upon the earth, But freewilled, selfish mankind will never establish such a system, and we will continue to pile up fu- ule st en, and continue to evade them, and continue to wonder at the increasing lawlessness of the people. oa HE avernge state legintature every other year manufac | tures more new laws than | the Britieh empire does in | ten. So British law ts rightly regarded a» more impreantve, more exact, more just than Amert can law. The fower laws you have, the more likely are you to enforce when each crossroads | town meeting legislates weekly on everything from a crowing rooster to the length of hotel sheets—two com- mon forms of local legislative anruse- ment-—you have a fuddied official dom and @ contemptuous citizenry. If every law, great and petty, was strictly enforced everywhere in this nation today, the only men who would be out of jail at the end of the week would be those confined to thelr beds. Every auto Griver violates some traffic rule once a week—most of us violate half a dozen a day. Half the men in Seattle whe spit Our multitude of school and health | and building and plumbing laws are | not only violated tn some instances by every one of us who haa a child, | or who builds a house, or who keeps | a home, but there are dezens of state and federal enactinents that we Dev. finally exhausted. eee N NATURE the harvest fol lows the ripening. Seeds germinate, the pear tree brings fobth pears and the thistle scatters thistle needs, Like begets like in nature, and the path of the sun and tife changing phases of the moon may be foretold for & thousand years, But man, being @ free mora] agent, also @ free immoral agent, compll lee, and there's nothing certain tn &@ man made world except that finally over the fundamentals, And this appears to me to be the big error in human calculations, Man finds nature always the same, and he believes that he can himself make laws that will be unchangeable we consider our laws as fundamental, vital, without exception, but in prac ‘ice our laws are Hable to daily ex- ception, and anything, from a judge’ @yspepsia to @ juror’s racial preju- dice, may defeat what call susticn, If our laws were all important, if We had no xilly laws, no clas-serving lawn, no {ilconsidered enactments, finest Cold Water crust. racti- | hear of them. Too many laws is a In theory | er observe because we never even national curse, Special skin treatment, Mofieat- 4 Complexion Beautifier, $3.12. GoitreGo remedy. Herb Medicine Mfg. Co, P. O. Box 851, Seattle 'Seattle’s Leading Dentist I am now Gevotin, | @iagnose each came, as well as do all extract |ing between the hours ofS a mandi pm | My offices bave beer established for mor: than @ quarter ef » century, @nd under my management 1 transient, advertising dentist. My prices are the lowest com tistent with firstclass work. EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. & Beattle’s Leading Dentint 106 Columbia St, Easy to Make—Can You Make It? OME people say that the making of flaky, delicate and easily di- gested pie crust “is an art.” Perhaps it used to be. Today even _ the inexpegienced girl can make pie crust. . - JOHNSON-LIEBER MERCANTILE CO, Seattle frequentiy heard Kee the next Star fer correct answer. ™\( GUESS THIS | ™ Raffertu | r the Only two things are necessary. A good recipe—which is given here And Mazola—which is sold by all grocers, Mazola makes delicate, flaky and easily digested pie crust because it is an absolutely pure, vegetable oil —from an edible source. Wherever you find cooks good pie crust, you will find Mazola. And once you nee you try Mazola you will never go back to lard and compounds, | MAZOLA really ed | |

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