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The Seattle Star By mal, oot of ott 8.08, Im the 14.88 for @ montha oF $9.00 per your montha, 62.76, year, 4 The per month week By carr . ike per 4 1 Incivility is the ex- treme of pride; it is built on the contempt of mankind.—Zimmer- said something, professor You said it'd be a considerable | fo us to run across those pre that @oean't begin to compare the shock puny men of today Often disrupt the government that gives them birth. It is only the country 4 to clear the lands and build the homes of the settlers. They considered it a tions for all time if they had had the foresight to scarred our history, all as the result of the presence The high license was resorted to as an economic Qjawful result. The liquor traffic soon became more orn dened bauched the city governments and wrecked homes. Sl only remedy, and many do yet. As an evil its growth could make a flock of 1 Sune coe pinerain 0 viral In the early d of California the miner called for help |Oriental for more than 40 years and has more of them now future was not considered. cunning for that—the pen is mightier than the sword. She pogo she will overrun the Philippines. She has her han /millions in the United States. in control of 250,000,000 people, the greatest productive insult anybody—just say we do not want any more and do vantage. are considering the present only. Shall we sell the birth- bill of lumber, shall we sell the right to millions of Japanese gate a virile of white people, to an alien race whose and| not ” cerns me now. A kind father will say, “If there must be are} Given a place to send their surplus population and Japan people the same as all virile people, but they thrive best of the United States controlled they will not need to go to Why consider our little pay business with Japan today?! we, a peur favorite poet? Quincy Adams, Henry Clay and others were battling for the Allen Poe and my grand-| politicians and said, “We Great evils are of slow growth, but when they come to full maturity they That has vision and looks far, ahead that avoids the breakers. { The introduction of the colored slave into this country was an economic one t opportunity to advance the interests of the farmer to have slaves to do| work. But what a great boon it would have been for succeeding genera-| have prevented it and saved the blood and treasure of the great rebellion and the lynchings that have! of the black man here—the fruit of the great evil of | slavery. measure to control the liquor traffic and furnish rev- enue for the government. We all know too. well the *\powerful than the government-controlled election, Tt would,” observes a learned dis | do} “sur _ Nae . modern man were he to meet | It claimed respectability because it was made lawful. & full grown specimen of ‘| Respectable people defended it, believing it to be the & Dinornis.” é i 1 say it would! A bunch of Dims, | Was rapid and it soon engulfed the whole nation and ies look like angle worms. And {is still hanging to its throat. think an ostrich was a baby} than & horse, and so heavy | #¢ross the Pacific—the Chinaman responded as an economic "t ltt both fect off whe factor. California has been waging a relentless war on the than at any other time. It was an evil day for California when the Chinaman arrived. Selfish interests ruled, the Let us look fifty years ahead. Japan is not going to war with this country—it would mean annihilation. She is too " ‘ proposes to get every man, woman and child she can into c Sie censors and ‘owellow © jthis country. She controls Hawaii now and in a few Phage what would a gang of Dino-|China, Manchuria and Siberia. Fifty years will see Japan think if they charged on «control Asia and the islands of the Pacific, with two or three She will control every industry west of the Rocky moun- tains unless restrained at once. Fifty years will see Japan : force in the world. She will get it by diplomacy, not war. To stop the increase in immigration it is not necessary to not intend to have any more immigration from Japan. And we can include several European nations to a good ad- Those who advocate Japanese immigration are generally those who have an interest coupled with their opinion—they right of our children for a mess of pottage? In order to sell another sack of flour, another barre! of pork, or another to come here and destroy the white race? Shall we deliver over this, the grandest place in the whole world to Ppropa- color and an its are the very opposite of our own? Let our watchword be, “What we cannot assimilate we do This question does not concern me for myself; it is my growing grandchildren and the posterity of us all that con- war, let it be in my time that my children may have peace.” I would stop the Asiatic immigration at whatever cost. will populate the earth. They will drive the white man to second place and dominate the world. They are a warlike Reporter: with peace. They are Planning fifty years ahead right now and when they have Asia, the islands and the Pacific Coast war, their power will dictate, their numbers outclass all| others. That's the business of politicians. Statesmen think of the DAY’S QUESTION future. One hundred years ago President Monroe, Johrt ANSWERS rights of the baby republics of South America. Observe NANNIE SHAW, $09 Spruce |What they are today. Had those great men been merely ‘were cousins. Perhaps that reason why I enjoy Poe so im will lose the sale of a few dollars’ worth of goods,” and the! ~y blighting eurse of autocracy would still clutch the throat of | F. M. READ, 9731 ¢2n4 ave.| that gréat continent. It takes brains, vision and courage to. > that’s rather a difficult}be a statesman. Anybody can be a politician—and we have to answer. I think I like! far too many of them. A. L. MILLER, Burns as well as any of the Edmonds, Wash. Good Business ‘A M. LACY, People’s Bank| “One of the fundamental difficulties in adjusting the conflict be-| Why, I am Yery fond of | tween capital and labor is the insistence, by capital, on the supremacy and I read Tagore a good|of property and contract rights," says the Atlantic Monthly. eal. The author of “The Newer Justice,” Louis Bartlett, believes, tho, that MAUDE AMON, 1817 N. 52n4 #t.—| labor ts making headway. the older poets—all of them. He thinks labor's progress ts dua tn no fittle measure, “to the grow- [AT DO YOU ing knowledge that what ts tn the social Interest, is also good business and productive of dividends.” In brief: It pays to give labor a square deat OW ABOUT EATTLE? Bartlett refuses to admit the square deal possible as long as property| QUESTIONS rights are held supreme—above human rights. ah a 1. How many miles of commercial ont does Seattle possens? UU of the city? ETHICAL DENTISTS 5 much did Woodland park TEETH AND THEIR DUTY How careful most people are that everything around them shalh be absolutely sanitary—so that what they | eat or drink might not be contaminated in any way. Yet you see people every duy with dirty, decayed teeth tn thelr mouths. In it any won der that they fall an easy prey to all sorts of diseases when every mouthful of food or every drop they drink takes just that much more poison {nto their systems? Why not be on the safe side and have your teeth put in thelr proper condition? No bired op eratore—all work done by specialists who are part owners of the business. O Kip WILLIAMS, New York ng and Swinburne are my jus (Answers Saturday) PREVIOUS QUESTIONS 1. The first three legislative acts in Seattle were an ordinance | & municipal tax, an ordinance ning «wihe” and an ordinance the prevention of drunkenneas. | 2, The Masonic order established a Wedge here in 1860, when the town Was only seven years old and boast- 4 & population of 150 @ An act of the legislative as “Pembly of the Territory of Washing . approved 1883, conferred the Bes of suffrage on women, who 4 for four years, when the. su- court held the act invalid MOTORS ENGINES PUMPS COMPRESSORS For Rent A. HL COX & CO., Ine. 991 First Ave. fo, Beattie QUDULUQUEOOUUUGOOOEUETUUTUAULOUUTLANTM NAAN LADY ATTENDANTS ELAAOTT 4357 160424 Bank For Serliga te: |talk of victory? must not offend Spain for fear we |» THE SEATTLE STAR EVERETT TRUE— G3, MY VOTE DECIDED T MEASURS AND ANYBODY Can TELL PROM THS Way You TALK THAT YOU'RE NOQ STUOGNT ow POLITICAL SCONOMY > _ BUT I'm A PRETTY STYDGNT CF POLIT Dr. Jas. I. Vance Writes for The Star Today on Victory! BY DK. JAMES L V Mowty and with great effort he, what you win over things, it ts what drageed himeetf acrom the street to you win over self, where I was waiting for acar, He was the most misshapen piece of) The first practical operation humanity 1 hed ever seen. der ether was performed in 1846 tn He was 62 years old, be said, and| the Massachusetts General hospital, looked the part. His deformition | Boston. dated from his birth, His mother had bees seared by a bull, and the prenatal penalty had landed on the body of her unoffending offspring and smashed it beyond repair; and for © years and more he had dragged the thing along the earth, watching the straight and virile and lithe forms of his fellows function with ease and grace I helped him aboard the ear to the seat, and then it was that he flung his question in my face: “I’reacher, why is it that more people do not get victory?” Vietory? The question all but took away my breath. Who waa he, to From the hour of his birth bis life bad been one long, crushing, deadening defeat. If he had spoken of pain, of anguish, of disappointment, of bitter resentment, of foiled ambition, of despair, I could have understood him; but the thin Ups, pallid with pain, were speaking of victory. ‘. He had victory. He bad won « bigger victory than was ever won by arms on the field of battie, He was not speaking of victory In war, or victory in busiaem, or victory In conflicts where he was matched against bis fellowmen. He was speaking of vietory, of con quering in a conflict wh: be daunt- lena soul of & man matches itaclf) uate prescribed against fear and hate and unrest and triet. | Mnlees absolutely necessary. all the foes that would destroy it. 1 BINXYON OPTICAL CO, naw the poor wretch straighten up and fling off his handicap, for I mw 1116 VINST AVE. Berween and Scocen that he was not his body. Spring — \ DR 2. & SINTON Free BEST $2.50 ciasses on Earth We are one of the fow optica: stores or iy Victory is on the inside, It ina iritual glory, It ts not merely NOW SS November Victor Records Many Beautiful New Numbers Hear them in our cozy, private and sound- proof record rooms, N SALE SS SD My Little Bimbe Down on the Bambee Inte +» Aileen Stanley -Alleen Stanley «Henry Burr Up in My orlese Qui Louise Terrell-William Robya ¥ Dreaming Sophie Brasiau, One visit to our cheerful and well-appointed Record Department and you will know where to buy your future records. > Seattle Music House 1216-18 Third Ave., Between University and Seneca Sta, Main 3139 | | Guced by discussion of the air erm: | Tz HUMOR ROMA ear. A ray of impudent moonlight) flickered upon her nose, But I was! adamant, nickel-plated. “I must go and find out.” I said, “what ts the Volos of this City.! Other cities have voices. It ts an as signment I must have it New York,” I continued, In a rising tone, ‘had better not hand me 4 cigar and way: ‘Old man, I can't talk for pub-| Meation.’ No other city acts that) way. Chicago says, unhesitatingly, ‘I will’; Philadelphia mnyn, ‘I should’; | New Orleans says, ‘I used to’; Louts | ville says, ‘Don't care if I do’; St. Zxcuse me’; Pittsburg Now York—" The Voice of the City (Copyright, 1990, by the Wheeler Hyndigate, Inc) ‘Twenty-five years ago the echoo! children use to chant their lessons ‘The manner of their delivery was « |aingtong recitative between the ut torance of an Episcopal minister and the drone of a tired enwmfll I mean no divrewpect. We must have lum. ber and sawdnet. I remember one beautiful and tn atructive Uttle lyric that emanated from the physiology class. The most striking line of it was thier “The shin-bone is the longest bone) 7 wer into a palace, tiefloored, in the human body.” cherubclnged and square with the What an {nestimable boon tt would | cop 1 put my foot on the braes rail have been if all the corporeal and and said to Billy Magnus, the best spiritaul facta pertaining to man|partender in the diocese had thus been tunefully and logic ally inculcated in our youthful!, jong tme—what kind of a song minds! But what we gained in anat|enddance does this old town give omy, music and philosophy wast! you? What I mean ia, doemn't the meager gab of it seem to kind of bunch up The other Gay I became confused.jand slide over the bar to you In a I needed a ray of ght 1 turned sort of amalgamated tip that hits back to thom school days for ai. off the burg in a kind of an epigram | Mut in all the pasa] harmonies we|with « dash of bitters and @ slice whitied forth from those hard | o¢— benches I could not recall one that! “Dxeuse me @ minute,” eald Billy, | treated of the volce of agglomerated | “nomebody’s punching the button at mankind. the side door.” In other words, of the composite) Hie went away; oame back with | voce! mesrage of massed humanity./an empty tin bucket; again vanished | In other words, of the Voice of @/ with it full; returned and said to me: Rig City. “That was Mame. She rings twice. Now, the Individual voice fe not! She tikes a glass of beer for supper. lacking. We can understand the|Her and the kid. If you ever saw leone of the poet, the ripple of the! that little akeesicks of mine brace up | brook, the meaning of the man wholin his high chair and take his beer wants five dollars until next Mon-jand— But, say, what was yours?” |ény, the Inscription on the tombs of | get kind of excited when I hear them the Pharaohs, the language of flow: | two rings—was it the baseball score ern, the “step lively” of the conduc-|or gin fizz you esked for™ tor, and the prelude of the milk cans! “Ginger alc.” I anewered at 4a. m. Certain largeeared ones| 1 walked up to Broadway. I mw even assert that they are wise tO/a cop on the corner. The cops take the vibrations of the tympanum pro’ | kids um women across, and men in. I went up to him “If I'm not excreding the spiel ” I sald, “let me ask you. You Louls says, ‘F jmays, ‘Smoke up’; Aurelia amiled. “Very well,” sala 1, “I must go elaewhere ani find out.” anating from Mr. H. James. But who can comprehend the meaning of the Volce of the City? jew York during its vocative 1 went out for to sea houra, It te the function of you First, I asked Aurelia. @he wore/and your brother cops to preserve white Swisn and a hat with flowers | the acoustics of the city. There must on it, and ribbons and ends of things | be a civic tone that ts intelligible to fluttered bere and there, you. At night during your lonety “Tell mo.” I mid, stammeringty.| rounds, you must have heard it. for I have no volce of my own, “what/ What ts the epitome of its turmoil does this big—er--enormous—er—jand shouting? What does the city whoppmg city may? It must have | say to your” volce of some kind. Does fit ever) “Friend,” mid the policeman, spin- speak to you? How do you Interpret / ning his club, “R don't aay nothing. its meaning? It ts a tremendous|1 get my orders from the man higher masa but it must have e key.” up, Say, I guess you're all right “Like @ Saratoga trunk?” asked/ stand here for a few minutes and Aurelia. keep an eye open for the rounds “No,” sald 1. “Please do pot fefer| man.” something to say to the one who can/he had returned. hear it, What doos the big one say| “Married last Tuesday,” he said, “PATHOS NCE John L. Sullivan, Edwin Markham, May Irwm and Charles Schwab would be about’ all But this is @ difteremt matter. Woe want 4 broad, poetic, mystic vocalization of the city’s eoul and meaning, You are the very chap to give me a hint. Some years ago © man got at the Niagara Falls and gave us ite pitch, The note was about two feet below the lowest G on the plano. Now, you can't put New York into a note um 8 it's better indorsed than that But give me an idea of what f would way if it should speak. It is bound to be a mighty and far-reaching utterance. To arrive at it we must take the tremendous crash of the chords of the day’s traffic, the laugh ter and music of the night, the solemn tones of Dr. Parkhurst, the ragtime, the woping, the ecalthy hum of cabwheels, the shout of the press agemt, the tinkle of fountains on the roof gardens, the hullabaloo “Billy, you've lived in New York |f the strawberry vender and the covers of Everybody's Magazine, the all these sounds must go into your Voice—-@ot combined, but mixed, and | of the mixture an essence made; and of the emense an extract—an indubt | ble extract, of which one drop shall form the thing we seek.” “Do you remember,” asked the poet, with @ chuckle, “that California, girl we met at Silver's studio last week? Weil, I'm on my way to see her. She repeated that poem of |mine, “The Tribute of Spring,’ word for word. She's the smartest propo sition in this town just at present Say, how does this confounded tie |look? I spotled four before I got one to set right.” my ‘Angel of the Inshore Wing." I pasped on. I cornered a news bey and he flashed at me prophetic pimic papers that outstripped the news by two revolutions of the clocks’ longest, hand | big i int to you?" half gruffiy. “ You know how they “All cities,” mid Aurelia, judicial-|are. She comes to that corner at ly, “ony the same thing. When they | nine every night for a—comes to say get thru mying it there is an echo|‘hellof I generally manage to be from Philadelphia, So, they are/there. Say, what was it you asked unanimous.” me a bit ago—what's doing tn the a Are 4,009,000 people. said) city? Oh, there's @ roof-garden or 1, holastically, “compressed upon|two just opened, twelve blocks up.” an island, which ts mostly lamb sur rather, ity j ruled, on the tower, shimmered in that finds its oral expression thru a/the clear light of her namesake in common channel. It &*, as you might/the sky. Along came my poet, hurry- my, @ consensus of translation, con-| ing, hatted, haired, emitting dactyia, centrating in @ crystalized, general|and spondecs. I seized him. idea which reveals iteelf in what] “Bill,” said I (im the magazine he may be termed the Voice of the City. /is Cleon), “give me a lift, I am on Can you tell me what tt is?” an amignment to find out the Voice Aurelia smiled wonderfully, © She/of the City. You see, it's a especial sat on the high stoop. A spray of In-'order. Ordinarily a symposium com- solent Ivy bobbed against her right prising the views of Henry Clews, See How We_Ma These Famous Snow . Visit our big modern bakeries where millions of Snow Flakes are made every day. See the spic and span interior. Note u the wonderful mixing machines and the huge brick ovens =i, fearing lest nN ke Flakes After you've seen them baked you'll know why they're so good. Your grocer can supply you Don't ack for Crackers and Obtainable in —Red Packages —Family-size Tins | whiepers of the lovers in the parks {