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The Seattle Star the, 92.78) year, The per montly 1de per week. The Bricklayer’s Wife Is Happy! Horee Published Datty by a months, $1 many years foot racing has enjoyed an evil repute, Wrestling is under sum Por the wninitiate, “But, thank heaven,” Americans said, “b all at least is t 1 lovers of honest sport, Most ball players are honest @AmMe as 4 shock to Sf baseball, The game must be saved. ‘The law can do something; the newspapers more. Always the innocent suffer with the guilty. 8S I remember a bank cashier who embezzled half a million dollars. pod” story. regarded prizefighters—the bigger they are the harder they fall. ‘aces munt be Socially and financially, the bank cashier was big. |“@ood”’ story. ) the stor would not have been so “good.” rest, trial and conyiction. ISHINGTON, D. C, Oct § Be hardest-worked man in Wash F is John Kramer, prohibition ent commissioner He have observed that there ar Hines in his face than there when he took his present job. has been working almost) and day trying to put John to the penitentiary. The banker's wife was at the station, She wondered why he did not embrace her. His wrists were manacled. the inception of prohibition. me : 4 he has had upon him the} [One of the loot burden of construing the 4 . in determining who! Values. Society does that. Ihave permits to obtain rum} with the guilty, lawful purposes, and it is toll | * him. } ce feowe he has to deal with always) worried, and he may contracted bis worries from ’ deus | team is a “better” one. Kramer has not lost nl Gisposition and he smiles thrul i) the news, newsboys staged a fight tn of the White House on the i ik. They put on a real dout/) ¢p, man of her choice. ~ vhite coppers : \ Aged pateg rege she cai trade—brick laying, perhaps. fence and couldn't get to them | player. them ' ran. red-faced Irishman, with a distinguished appearance along and stopped to the scrap. rate them,” the policemen att spectator. bbers, let ‘em go,” replic Trishman. “Bejasees, every time two boys fighting, I feel a tie desire to hit somebody on/ myself.” | the boys decided nobody separate them, they became at the crowd that was his wife and children. He weeps too late. adulation of him. sporting writers. 6 there isn’t much of it. cent suffer. Dr kd sheck hands | But who shall say that publicity, if cruel, is not good as a j deterrent? How many bankers, tempted, said to themselves | when they read of the cashier’s fall: “For my wife's sake | | dare not risk it”? How many young ball players, tempted, jare pondering at this moment the case of Cicotte, who weeps for his wife and babies—too late—and vowing in their hearts that they will close their ears to the lures of the “aces” and ss ~FRED L. BOALT. ers to the play honest baseball? Two Parties , “Our two- fany other political sy has lasted longer nt un Unifed K JUMBER CARGOES? "Editor The Star: Is there no way f nd the new high rate on lumber ernment. It Yw be nts? Can‘t that lot of idie| Thus speaks Se now in Lake Union be used for| can women ve ber shipments thru the canal to| What can he Atlantic and Great Lake ports, | redeiving yards could be pro- a? Time in transport of lumber not matter after a supply has established, where the orders be received and filled. All of leo is now open for business, | @ building boom is on adopted in the mean? before the United States was bor to Every Man's © accident of the which. According historical period, a become ster od into division of political the spectacle of two yelopedia, It long m forgo! 4 dito a fe after its causes has b parties, W. J.T. | divided on a number of important txsuen, each, whether In power or e@q@e in opposition, presenting a very nearly un ARE NOT FIRST an the best or only means of retaining or ga EXCLUSION | the proverbial ‘swing of the The Star: In reference to} Fecent editorial, “Without Ran-| ” would suggest that you edviee | Feverend gentlemen ,and their 1 Jap lovers that they read the| Daguetre, In 1820, “The Japanese in California,” | He worked on hia t pendulum.’ * The Photograph a 20 years, and in 1840 the first etober issue of World's Work| ture” of a human face was mado x ine, They might find that our} The initial success followed fatlure, Daguerre took an exposed . or California is not the| plate from a camera one day, and, dixcoutaged at his | “pte to have the exclusion idea, }the plate retain the picture, t fit into @ cupboard —With the World's have just driven in from Tacoma] e found the pict on the p A dish of me Gréatest Character passed a Jap farm on which four| cupboard, had done the work. From then to now - . Women were planting or weed-| photography has been Comedians Hotwithstanding the fact that it| The centennial of the « a sees it snap ax caaneatall: seene | raining steac }a moving world, and catch the smallest w of the human face note artic on front page of} - epceneite — | Zap foreman striking a white| R a En and only fined $20. Why| tang! wee presented with « ban Jowa is the elghth state to refuse intrastate railr 7? Keep up the good work. ‘The position town takes is that while the interst Yours truly, MARMION. regulate of f | mission may ra it has nothing to # Seven A passeng at mates shall be All of which federal | sna, | courts mus ilroads On behalf of the | Sour whieh, ft st Division Ar oe is to systems t State of Washington, 1) eee vith the natic system to cordially thank you for the] generous ance given to} association nion committee. | “Powder River” veterans of the West division will remember | fmterest and good will; also the The man who went o1 berries and got more There’ this make you m eight un-beaned him grape juice hig Surprise said in favor of the at car home. racing tn @ The Chicago expos driven Hence this story It was a ee reporters regard people in the news as Bob Fitzsim- That is why it was a If the janitor of the bank had stolen We played the story for all it was worth—the ar- We even followed the man to the union station when an officer was taking him At the moment of farewell, she threw her arms about his neck and kissed him. But he could not. | Some people condemned the newspapers for dragging the 's shoulders to the mat) wife into the story. She hadn't stolen any money, She shared But the newspapers don’t make the rules governing news And always the innocent suffer) If the crime of the banker was a “good” story, the crime of | | the ball players who betrayed their fellows on the Chicago For we Americans put our baseball stars on pedestals and worship them. “Babe” Ruth is a bigger man than Morgan— Cicotte weeps because of the shame he has brought upon I-have in my mind’s eye two girls, chums. Each married) The husband of one stuck to his} The other became a ball The wife of the ball player watched her man’s rise—from “semi-pro” to full-fledged “pro”; from bush league to major.| She was proud of her man, and enjoyed to the full the public's} She cheered him from the grandstand and conned avidly the complimentary things said of him by the But the bricklayer’s wife is no longer jealous of her chum. It is clean money that the bricklayer brings home, even if Men suffer two penalties for their sins—that imposed by the court and that imposed by society. And always the inno- = mn the United States than any: constitutional gov tor Harding in a written communication to republi- As @ matter of history the two-party system existed In Great Britain “wns evolved from the division into whigw and tories in the Stuart re presents or apparently penta ding to wovered the principle used inQmaking photographs “sunlight pic in a restaurant must have ordered red rasp. all—it docan’t THE SEATTLE STAR | SVERET? TRUE Bow VP BERLIN v “ou if By Whit Hawthorne says in his diary that he never & chance thought of value pass from hia mind. He jotted it do Later, he used hundreds of such 1 his famous “House of Seven G es i Several of the greatest men tn his “ice.” ing 1 Hoth books were written dur- spare time. ' Edison had few chances as a boy 12 he had read thru Hume bon, one or two other him ber of treatises on ‘ an & newsboy and ugh to buy a news kK wtore and a vegetable | market While rynning all three, he read thru the "Penny Magazire fur ton's Anatomy of Melancholy,” “Utt's Dictior of the Sclences” and Newton's Principia.” This experience,” he says “Hello Alexander” AND And a Company of 100 Artists ation shown by the news fraternity Therefore, th ig Bivoon ove Sao «Sol Here Ig a Fine Laxative For a Little Baby Millions of Mothers find Dr.Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin safe for infants Wiat young mother has not 5 often asked herself the ques- tion, “What is the best thing I can give my baby for constipation?” It is a very important question, as con- stipation is the basis of most ills of infancy and childhood. Give half a teaspoonful of a com- bination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin. You can obtain it at any drug store under the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Itisa mild, gentle medicine that children willingly take, and a bottle that costs only sixty cents is enough to last an average family several months. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin has been used by millions of mothers, for the pre- scription has been soldin drug stores for thirty years. It is the same prescription Dr. W. B. Caldwell, whois now in his 82nd yor used in his extensive practice for half acentury. It is the largest sellin, Hauid laxative inthe world. Last year eight million botties were bought in drug stores. You can make no mistake in giving Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin to your baby. Send me your name and address and I will send you @ free trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin. Address me Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 513 Washington St.,Montice! Illinois. Everybody now ar then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. WRITE ME TODAY. YESTERDAYS PROVERD* “HASTE MAKES WATE * hove iMustentes « pre | und we of thine moet hee ea NOW AT THE Metropolitan If you would see the largest and best musical attraction now touring the Pa- cifie Coast, I would earnestly suggest that you don't fail | to see McIntyre and Heath in “Hello Alexander.” — Geo. T. Hood, Mgr. Met- ropolitan Theatre. TONIGHT with a (Matinee Tomorrow REAT SUNS, MRS. ENOUGH Powber ON Your FACE TO DID YOU KNOW THAT— | Grand Trunk Herald, tory won fame outside of their regu lar occupations without trespassing | upen them, Herbert Spencer, for example, startled profound thinkers by hin “Ultimate Setentific Ideas” and his “Relativity of All Knowl "By CONDO TRUE OV'VE GOT] | Do you suprose I'm GOING DOWN THE STREET WITH LOOKING LIKG THAT $4 Why Be Discouraged? Hadley ompted me 5 to take my pen nies and buy id type and plates for ‘patent tneldes' from the Detroit Free Presa” Us a bag gage cur which he pure 4 for $40 a an office, Edison produced “The which was the newspaper ever pub- lished on a railway train. He was editor typenettey wit” and vender He learned telegraphy from a sta nm 7 at M t Clemens and m later strung a telegraph | th Mon to the town, arding mm at 10 cents h. The Western Union company | discovered the wire, took it over and made Edison their chief operator at/ Port Huron, Constantly studying and experi-| menting, in 1878 Edison first exhib-| ited @ phonograph at the Parla expo- nition. first and only wner reporter preseman. w * Edison haw taken out 400 patents and has been called by the United | commissioner of patents, in style: “Young-man-who-has pa th-to-thepa ten ern footatepa.” Best opportunities are homemade, PHONOGRAPHS read and meat and potatoes | ~ o FB og te ow ghey ropping Prices con belay co high, laborers in this period of readjustment mean much fe have more wages, to the individual who has acquired the sav- eed el ter Pe a alas a ing habit. Gradually money saved is ac- We were like the farmer that quiring additional buying power. Save now rained more corn, to feed more hogs, | above all times. Invest accumulations in re © oer, rene are Seattle Local Improvement Bonds and let ire, feed more hogs, to get ap your money earn ly. Let us Pronounced by Critics to Be the World’s Greatest Phonograph LEAGUE | LUNCHEON Ke Doctor Frank | CRANE'S| | Daily Article | :: (Copyright, 1920) Prices Come Down. It Had to Be. The Vicious Spiral. | Orderly Recovery. Prices are coming down. They had either to come down le nd in order, as they are le or In time would have come jown with a smash After the war, or rather during | the war, the Vicious Spiral began. | Dn. J. R. BINTON forties dations’ oa Free Examination { | r hates, the world of nati ©) gimeracks. | 2 50 LASSES war Manufacturers fol BEST e Gi ; War's other name is Waste, prices. Also the # on Earth é We'd the handwriting on th o enh ot 00s few ee ; Bi td And now we have begun the pain | 11 Secon teat that real is th Of good material ful but tary process of sobéring | Pring lenses. from start fist ‘ pga bok asnalimewt yam jup and ¢ down the spiral and we are only one io ‘ Tt all nt wo much subtracted | “ire will be no panic, But there SKATILE—ON FiInST Be of the} 7 " uate op= from the p “4 ihe twill be a deal of grumbling eomzemine! es by graduate fea 4 race, wh teh 0 he! . ‘ost 1 it is eanier freeaing 10 | Watley absolu ecensary. t mE nips an ay leath an oom! D. } PT) phe are | utts and in. |" The ri ie or t 5 soln however BINYON O ICAL co. , telligence | by s 5 reasing Intellig nave |, 2% Teansuring ao ite aacent was 1116 ee end Seneen, P an due! ay To pay for this debauch, O14 Order, to the lack of| - Government, issued ady of paper promines. ing & superabundance of «ae of goods, to go up. on Vheae Main ngerous, to the nit =e we the first pl it was ody, from the trust mag to the plumber, was making more | money, | | people began to buy luxuries. | was an immense sale of dia , Russian sables and silk pa | ™ Jamas Then wages started climbing, be it took more money to buy Some day or other people would counsel with you, have got tired of getting pleces of paper for their debts and wages, and would have demanded regular money ‘Then the crash would have come. ' ruptey would have swept the country We were saved ‘from that by our League of Hanks, which fortunately we had formed, over the protest of moet of the banks themselves. i The pe olted. They began wearing overall “i buying fewer NATIONAL CITY BANK DANCING INFORMAL - Supper dances every evening except Sunday, 9:30 to 12:30 EVERYBODY WELCOME NEW WASHINGTON HOTEL Music furnished by Billy Webb's Orchestra pepe gra’ a AND RECORDS TERMS TO SUIT