The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 20, 1920, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

e Seattle Star Pubitened Datir|. by The Star Publiontms On out of city, He per month: B montha 61.60; @ months, #276: rear, ington. mm the Sate of Washi 14.00 for @ montha oF $9.08 per year, Two weeks from today the port election will be held. On the Tuesday fol- Outside of the stata The per mouth, By carrier, city, Ake por week the school election will be held. elections are important. Get a with your polling Learn TOKENS A lady's glove & «@ symbol of laces. qualifications of the candidates. Many of the precincts have been consolidated since the general election. You may not be voting at the same place you voted on November 2. p.m. to8 The polls will be open for the port election from P. m. Saturday. The candidates are George B. Lamping, bar Bw state THE SEATTLE STAR Study the Bible An Editorial by Martin H. Glynn | Editor Albany (N. Y.) Times-Union ‘The effect that the Hible has had] Study the Bible-and with upon the world is beyond estimate.| guiding «tar of a spangled heaven “Hdueate men without religion, and! overhead, with the treasures of the | you make them but clewer devila, Wine Men scattered around a God said the Duke of Wellington, And | graced crib—their gold, their frankin- Colton said, “Philosophy t @ bully | eense, their myrrh-—amid the warmth | that talks very loud when danger in! of friendly, breathing kine, when | at @ distance, but the moment she) palnces morificed the distinction of | hard pressed by the enemy she! the ages to the humility of @ stall not to be found at ber post, but|— «ing, sing with the « the the brunt of the battle to be| Celestial Carol in the lowly atable of but steadier | Beth affects to de) eav tone by her humble comrade, Religion, {1 | epive.” ‘That is the great value of! your bookshelf the one your mother the atudy of the Tibia In it | used to read and in the golden glow | found the eruteh of life upon which | of twilight, when light is giving way to lean when all other props are/ to darknems just as life gives way to gona, the key that opens the door | death, let these glortour lines of Geo. hem. the! Btudy the Ifble—take down from | THREE Sp SOO a= ogee G8 OR FOUR FLIOCS IN A RESTAVRANT CAN'T BE HELPED, BUT NOU HAVE THEM IN HERE IW BATTALIONS. ME TAMOULS SLOGAN “SWAT THS FLY” HAVEN'T YOu 7 YOU HAYS HGARD TODAY’S QUESTION When do yuu feel better in Seatte, when it rains or shines? ANSWERS MORTON V. HILL, 919 Ofive atm “In Seattle we have to take it as ity comes and aay it's just what we ordered.” MKS. ANNIE FRISBIE, 42% 110m ave, N “] fest pretty good when, t rains, but I like the sunshine very well.” MKS. CATHERINE MAYER, sit 19th ave.’ “I don't really know, F Uke the rain as well ax the sunshine.” CHAKLES D. HOFFER, 118 Pike at. “Say, brother, turn on the sun or turn on the rain and Charlie Hoffer steps just as “high.” | MES. DORA B. PRESLITY, 260% | Boytston ave. Ni “It doesn't make For the first little baby’s shoe, | Senator, introduced the veterans’ bonus bill and fought for —By Edmund Vance Cooke | Progressive measures generally, and Thomas S. Lippy, pres-| ‘ent port commissioner, pronouncedly a pro-Jap. The school candidates are Carl Croson, a young progress- U Cc Bl is ive attorney; Judge Richard Winsor, veteran socialist mem- }ber of the beard, and E. Shorrock, member of the board. F E q If you don’t know your polling place, call up the registra- | L tion office, Main 6000. | ‘The fellows who were bragging a/ aS RES Uncritical that their basements were ot have retired to make those who are bragging} Henry W. Nevtnson, the Engtioh writer and publicist, eaye that he ease | they have @ ton of coal in their| to America expecting to find Americans “ij}mannered and boastful and | oversharp tn busines,” and, politically, “inclined to change and rebellions.” | Instead, he found them “polite, dhiiging, modest, careless of business” but “tar from libertytoving or rebellious.” | Just as Americans are preening themscives that his optnion ts so much | bétter than he expected, he adds that this “easy-going, unerttical dimpoaition * © © t the darkest and most dangerous aide of American history at the present time. I mean, of course, the uneritical conservatiam and the un- | critical obedience to authority. If men fear death an@ children fear the dark, then Americans fear change In the sume manner. * * * Where there is hardly any public criticism the state tteelf ts in danger.” Americans reading thin just after the recriminations of a national eam Paixn may be inclined to «mila but that ts really avoiding the question. Campaigning ts far from being public criticiam of the state, or of constituted authority. | Is it not a fact that an Amertean orator today cannot paraphrase Patrtek | Henry, Thomas Jefferson or Abraham Lincoln without being suapected of eee being more or less of a demagoguc? True, tf the auditors know that be | ‘ EARN is merely quoting, Indirectly, theee great men, they accept the statements, | 0 CHANCE TO 1 | whatever they may be, but is not that merely another form of “uncritical “There! exclaimed ¢-yearold Ber | uetience to authority”? throwing down a book, “I just 15 it not a fact that the famboyancy of the “Gtve me Mberty or’ etve me going to school another day" gear Americanism has 90 irritated American senaibilities that Amertoans iy,” asked her mother, “what's pave forgotten the earnestness the sincerity and the high nobility of the ‘matter? It's no use wasting time.” replied Bee seal Tittle miss. “I can't never learn | . of spell The teacher just kegpe | the words every day."— 4 bis at BO eee TR most be quite a job to transfer one street car to another tm . Here is the way a paper ‘that city tells you how to find the point: “The proper transfer point ts the point at which the car the pas wishes to transfer to takes a it direction from the car he is a eee Today's Best Bet: Crooks may and crooks may £9, but cafe are with us always ' «| acroes the Bering strait, America & only 54 miles divtant. i Japan bitherto bas claimed special rights In the Orient because of her consideration. Profound effeeta upon the future history ef the Fur Bast may follow fom this caus The government of Russia will repudiate many contracts of validated. The contractual area ts a cold wilderness. A garden ctth Peder speaks of “beginners” and “finishers.” He points out that there are good “beginners” and good “fininhers,” meaning that dren are enthusiastic workers when the work is new to them, | are as enthusiastic near the season's end. “The beginners,” he saya, “ge well until weeds and hot weafher untte garden work unpleasant. Then they quit. Too many of finisher rather than a young army ef good begin ib leader exclaimed. “They don't show up so startling at the first, but they do «tick to it during the summer months when The finishers are the ones who reap the harvest.” | Now tent that as true of everything else tn life? In peace or war: In shop or office; in field or mine; in any and all human endeavors? The) good beginner, unless be, also, is a good finisher, never reaps the full matter there. They simply in grave atmosphere in the on the bill this week are high what? eee i Now that the otection's over, and the necessity for political camoufinge, WE WOULDN'T THINK HED extravagant clairns and general buncombe is passed, this newspaper would like to suggest both to the sucestful aspirants for office and to those who | will continue to hold office until the new congress and administration | takes charge, that the American people are vitally Interested in a few | important questions, which have not been touched, or have been barely touched in the campaign, Here they are: 1—The cost of Bring. 2—The relations between capital and labor, 2—The making of peace. 4~—The retura of civil rights tn Amertea, 5&—The housing shortage. Any new officebolder can gain the rempect and affection of the American people if, now that he ts elected, he will bend his gray matter to possible means of grappling with these problema. WANT ANY PAY And, apropos of nothing™ gee, it “Must be good to be the leader of the and sit way up on a high | and right in front of the foot : scratch my whiling fidd{e; While gals come Nightly on and off, And keep their togs—just how's the riddle. : eee ; “"VersatiNty is the secret of mar Pied happiness,” exclaims Mra. Adri. Bn Ross, noted British writer. _ _ To express it in plainer language, | | @on’t be always rheeting him with «| Ec | The Crystal Auditorium | The Crystal Pool Sent or Sometimes use a base ia bat, or chunk of coal, if you're, SECOND AND LENORA ite enough to have coal ‘ i POSITIVELY NO ROLLER SKATING Floor Now Being Polished and Waxed by Dancing 9 to 12:30 fea wate It, ‘They're all ip read, The Most Popular Dancing Pavilion in Seattle om a WHY NOT? ee Booker the Agent—I cant use THE SEATTLE HARDWOOD FLOOR CO. EEE? scene a auitaenet and Will Be Ready for Dancing Saturday Night echool. November 20 The Ventrfloquist—But I work the oF Uiempsy's tow 211 the tine. Leave Everybody Welcome to the chamber of solace when all’ P. Morris run thru the corridors of) other doors are closed. Btudy the Dible A myriad of Iife's Inesons can be learned from tts pages. It te the/ chart and compas: by which to sail the seas of existence; the cloud by day, the pillar of fire by night by which to guide our feet along the ; u stoneetrewn journey of lif?s tor-| tuces pichway It is the treawury of the world's knowledge, the custodian of the berttage of the agen, the pre server of spiritual balm that heals the troubles of the soul, It is yee tarday, teday and tomorrow; the re Meetion ef the past, the mirror ef the present, the prophecy of the fu tora It is the scroll of time, the phormtne of eternity. It portrays the eycle of life with fs sorrows and its joys, tte cross and its crown.| Tt is old, but nothing outside of tt & new, | It t a untverstty of knowledee, &m acon Upon arons of experiences, | Stady the Biblia, master it-—and you are brother to the kings of mind, companion to the choicest sptrita of the heart. Master it-—you know the history of mankind; study it—~you! absorb the grandest poetry In the! world; manter it—and life's tragedies have no terror, life's misfortunes bear no lance, Study the Bible—catch fs epirit—/ write ite lessons on your beart— stamp its image on ur mind—and though your feet are on earth you walk with your head among the stare, Study the Bible—etod¢y tt and grow! in wisdom with Mose, lament with Jeremiah, sing with Solomon, suffer with Job, battle with David and walk the golden streets with Joba. | Study the Bible and lsarn Ruths! inapirational joyalty to the ties of friendship, the claims ef kin—"where thon goest, I go, and where thou! livest. I live: ty friends ahall be my friends, and thy God shall be my God; where thou diest I will die and there I will be buried.” “for better or for worne” may have « ribbon, pr after « while, please God, a child who calle him Life was meant for double harness It la wonderful how marriage, when it is a rel union, brings out the | ners can study It as well as saints— best. It touches hidden «prings and *ummons traita Uat had been dor mant Yes, marriage ts worth the pric. But it te not to be entered tnto light- ly, for whatever the divorce courts tony my, the Ue is “Lill death do us a Wedding bells do not play ragtime must, The tones are deep and rich and solemn. Nothing is fuller of solemnity than the wedding hour, for nowhere is 90 much involved. Neither do the wedding bells pay a diree, Wor all the solemnity of their deep tones, i ts @ jubflate There is no hour so rich. If we could only sustain the note! Why not? Why not carry down the yearn the gladness of the marriage hours? Is there any reagon the honeymoon should end? Surely tt we refused to listen to the call of folty, surely if our estimate of some values were mane, surely if we only remembered some things and tried to forget others, the music of the wedding bells would ring on down the years. No, It ls not allover, Thank doa it has just begun! May THis grace let us walk together down a rose path into the twilight of a peaceful old age, and then, when the day done, here's hoping! REV. M. A. MATTHEWS will deliver a sermon Sunday night, entitled “THE PURITAN OR THE SPONGE, WHICH? Rev. S. F. Palmer, D..D., Moderator of the General Assembly, will speak in the morning. Good Music Everybody Welcome FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH memory’s sacred walls— MY MOTHER'S BIBLE ‘This book te all that's left me now, nbiddan start ne Nip aod throbbing brow to my heart yw Bhe, ¢ying, An! well do T remember those Whose names theme records bear, Whe ‘round the hearthstone wand te ctose pages ante id theft (dead Asia that itt Within the balls ef home! ‘Thee truest Triend man ever Enew Thy cometsncy Ive tried: Where aif were That could thie volume bey; In teaching me the way te Live, Tt taught me bow to die, That ia the value of the Bibte- {ta priceless value—in teaching hew to Live, It teaches how to dia Stn better #0, for mints don't need it. But for mont of ua, who like the just mah of his scriptures, falleth seven times @ day, the Bible is what medicine te to « tan, what rest to & wearted soul. There may be some tm this sordid world whe are so good, #o tm maculate and #0 clean, who feel that) wou, V6 THOUGHT OF A NEW ONE — SWAT THE PROPRIETOR! \MEAT, NOT TOBACCO, TO BE NEXT VICTIM OF REFORMERS, FRANK CRANE THINKS BY DR FRANK CRANK (Copyright, 1920, by Frank Crane No;, the next object of attack by the terrible army of progress, now that they have routed alcohol, will not be tobaces, It will be Meat, Let the ment eaters tremble. It is well to keep in mind that ft waa not the fanation, moralists, and Why would the man not better eat the grains direct? Why the inter | tude of slaughter? | ‘The particular sustaining element we get from meat is protein. And |the international commissiéns who | studied the matter during the war are quite unanimous in thelr verdict, |ways the Life Extension Bulletin, | they need not the healing touch of | meddiers who took awny our darling | that we need far leas protein than retigion, but we rather suspect much are like the Pharisse who talked down to the altar rafl and thanked God he was not lke other, men. Uppla It was the cold-bivoded ect enitista, It was the tourte-headed profemors with thelr test tubes and formulas | has beretefore been supposed. Professor Sherman points out that the experiments made to test the amount of protein we need gave mis We would rather be the Publican |in ther laboratories, & wae the Ufe|teadingty high rewalta, for various who stood afar off and thumped his | insurance actuaries with thetr deadly | reasons. breast and said “God be merciful te | arrays of figures and their mysteri| The verdict of the commons that they feol weakness and depression | me, @ sinner.” ous bat Uncecapable law of averages, to|¢ cut, but would average about 20 a particle of difference to me.” ‘WHAT DO YOU ‘KNOW ABOUT \SEATTLE? QUESTIONS | 1 How many parks has Seatfie! | 2 What largest world industry | carried on bere? ‘ | 3. When did the first gol4 stp4)) |ment from Alaska arrive at tu. A | port? Answers Monday) Vi ee PREVIOUS QUESTIONS | 1 Counctiman Philip Tindall was |awarded the Distinguished | medal and the Croix de Guerre ing the world war. | 2 The Port of Seattle's stx terms. nal units represent an investment of 49,000,000 and a present valastion of; more than 818,000,000, 2 The Lake Washington canst jocks are the largest In the UL 6. the main lock being 625 feet long and 8% feet wide per cent Ontmeal contains 16 per cent, and bread and cereals about 10 per cent. About 12 ounces of oat meal, or 5 ounces of meat, are re quired to furnish the protein each yaar for an average man. Less is | really required, as protein from other sources i sure to be included in the | diet. The old idea that ‘lashings of | meat are, necessary to support ‘pep” and vitality is pretty well exploded. a aaa -_—~ ‘cei Horlick’s Maited Milk INA counta SAMUEL M Ww Pay master General of the Navy. 11-10-; SAVINGS DEPARTMENT, Open Saturday Evenings From 6 to 8 o’Clock \ Gayety, enfiness, longing, romance, adoration—al of the changing moods—ere expressed tm the blending of sounds that make the great musical symphonies or tm the colors pled @n canvas that make masterpieces in painting. ! Many Gepartments must blend together to make a bank that ty a help to a eammentty f the broadest sense of the word. The more important departments of this bank are the Cheeking, Savings, Foreign, Trast, Bond, Collection, Loans, Information and Mail depart ments. We are prepared to handle any kind of banking business, Our Information and Mall departments are somewhat new tn banks. The Information @eak is situated near the entrance and ts used a great deal by people not entirely familiar with banking. The Mail department has proved a big success, as by «imply writing ue « letter one may handie absolutely any kind of bank business through the mafl, even te cashing @ check in some Instances, TR does not matter whether you do your bahking with us er not, we are here to-eerve Seventh and Spring you and will do our best to please you, apeye = yaw y " SRCOND SEATTLE Deposits Guaranteed By Washingtoh Bank Depositors’ Guan / anty Fund of the State of Washington. Tae we So a St = Member Faderal Reserve Bank. AE SCANDINAVIAN AY) ERICAN BANK Brmch at Ballard

Other pages from this issue: