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The Seattle Star out of otty, the month) 2 montha, $1.66; @ months, $2.75; yearn Feed, ta the Beate of Washington, Outside of the stata, Yee par mona $4.60 for ¢ montha oF $9.00 per year, By carrier, city, Le per week. { Neighborly Booze 4 — the wind sweeps the vi , aceous aroma to Friend Neighbor’s nostrils ‘When the scent of the malt is w the breeze breezes brews, and the nose knows it’s booze, ah! What “then ’Tis time for Friend Neighbor to bestir himself! But let him beware the road he taketh, so sayeth | Federal Judge Jeremiah Neterer. Men find it more easy to flatter than to prai: —Richter. UCH is LIFE? Today's best bet: A ruistn tn the eette is worth two In the hand. or he must cease forthwith. For he who knows of a law ties, is himself a felon! The judge, let it be known, was not merely casual in the above remarks. He was earnest, and—may we say ?-—-vehem- ent. He jumped with both feet, so to s of fists on several witnesses who had failed to “snitch.” We'll vociferate he did! It is but fair to assume that the judge felt quite “het up” by the incident. And far be it from us fo throw cold a in a firewater case, Yet who wants to be a “snitch”? The judge may be right. He may have quoted the law, | as written in the books. But what of human nature? The “snitch” is a violation of human nature. Even in school days we knew that, and so regarded it. When ae After at, there tent much differ E fm the port commission fight friends want Lamping: Eappy’s friends want a look in. eee Now that Judge Notorer has made W plain that you must tell the — . i] =Wite aides Husband'y Cash.” The judge, we fear, is hoping for too much if he expects a host of voluntary informers. And mayhaps ‘tis better so. "Tis more peaceful to have neighborhood booze than neigh- 5 To Kill Wildcats Every dollar Invested tn wildcat stock t thrice lest: First, by the man who saves it; Second, by leeitimate industry forced te compete for capital against blue-sky stock ci Third, by society, which would have profited by use ef the money i? legitimate business. And it ten't alwayr the dollar sunk tn mythical gold mines or oll wells that thus commits uicide, Ww. B former member of the federal trade commianton, cites the cas8 of a substantial, going New York concern, in need of more capital, It got the money on these terms: Of every dollar invented by | the public the company received 30 cents. The balance was split three ‘A dow horror dawned in Lay) ..55 23 cents to the underwriters 39 cants to the sub-underwriters and 18 cents to the brokers, "| Addressing the National Coffee Roaster? association, Colver mid that a way must be found to protect against Mnancial middlemen who exact such terrible tofl, and the out-andeut crook. id At Efforts of various states to do this thru “binesky” laws have been INQUISITIVE | ineffectual. There are obvious drawbacks, also, in proposed schemen infant hed junt/ to license stock tmues thru a faleral agency or some recognized stock day wa gene ennul.| Federal license would make the government almost a guarantor of around. | tame ©. K.'d, and woul hamper many worthy enterprises net able to ner, “what comply With technical rules. The stock exchange plan would put legitimate business in the hollow of the hand of the stock broker Publicity ts Colver’s solution—enforced publicity of all facta involved In the stock issue. He would require detafled statements of & concern’s financial and phywical condition, of the purpose for which the new money would be used, of all promotion fees and payments to bankers, Underwriters or Be mys headline. The coker must invented a substitute for borhood feuds. | (rousers® pockets. a “ef | | Waenrest KIND OF WoRK | Lorenzo and Dog-Tired Dick discussing something they Uttle about—work. I think,” said Lazy Lorenzo “that they did away with work alto-| it'd put an end to these ‘ere - = id = Dog-Tiret Dick be the time when covery th done by clectricity. Only let to presa a button and the job's : ‘ Cotver, Ry. “Who's agoin’ to press! button —Houston Post Recent news digpatches show ‘that there t# a surpins of labor tn penggraonye Pusey’ 4 large industrial city in the country, “but in only one ig two places ts it abnormal compared with prewar normal conditions.” are these “normal” conditions? Poplin estimates of the Wisconsin industrial commission show unemployment increased 3 cent in September over August and wages drereased per cent. The American Association for Labor Legislation says that prospective widespread unemployment In the United States calls for tmmediate legiaia- a 7 Magee | tion to avert a repetition of the bowaddine crinis of 191415, | | The Massachusetts State Employment Office reports that applications for belp from employers fel) off 22 per ent in October compared with 4q| September, and 42 per cent as compared with October, 1919. In Chicago, slackness in the garment industry © growing, while in New York it has reached large proportions. In the lumber industry mills are closing down. Memphis reports that } 95 per cent of the hardwood mills in the southern territory will be closed by December 1. On the Pacific coast sawmill production is expected to be Mew York waiter dies leaving for-| curtailed 50 per cent. tune of $71,664.39.—News Item. The national industrial conference board.says that “unemployment, ac- | cording to reports of various state bureaus, is increasing, but has not yet “Oh, make your more gencroun. | attained serious proportions!” Af ” Serious proportions! Ob, no, these are the “normal conditions of pre small) war times! They are conditions under which between one and three mil. | ion workers are constantly out of work, want work, and can't get it It | is of this “army of unemployed” that ex-President Taft made his well-re- membered remark, when asked what could be done about the problem “God knows! They have my sympathy!” Is this the only answer the United States’ can give tn this day and age? The Difference [weed a proclamation of general amnesty for ALL political prisoners -}tive November 11, 1918 ‘What's become of the fella who siways hummed “Dardanelia”? typ Heo one Judge Neterer’s favorite song ts “Tell Me.” eee “The Jitneys Must Go.” we hear . Oh, pickles and ice cream! Didya make a trip tn the stadium Satur Betrayed for a Quarter! Every Hote, Hospttal, Apartment House, Restavrant or Club that acceptaa twenty. five cent commission for or- dering @ touring car when « taxicab ts ordered te seiling its patrons’ confidence We operate the onty author fred taxicabs in the City of Seattle. Each cab in equipped with @ taximeter that auto- matically figures the amount be paid at a fixed rate, and insnes @ printed receipt for the fare paid On account of our extreme. ly low rate we cannot pay commissions en calls. Bee that yokr dispatchers order @ taxicab when @ taxi. cab i» ordered and ineure them the only reliable and reasonable service in Seattle. Seattle Taxicab Company 17 restaurant men, 9% ather irs, 10 publishers and four re- in the Prees club. If you attord five smackers, don‘t the reporters. see EXACTLY | Who? The respon- sible real estate man. People come to him with homes to sell, | and somewhere on his list you may find just the home you have been looking for, with | prices and terms made to suit you. that we all must die?” “Ah, that’s the exc®ption to the Tule that all rules have their excep- If it has been his habit to pay a friendly call on his neigh-| violation, the judge declares, and informs not the authori- | eak, and a couple ‘he federal weiang will be Johnny made faces at teacher, and Reggie “snitched,” who | of informers just lke the received the approbation of the class? Johnnie. Who was) louse of David in a barbers’ conveo-| shunned and ostracised? Reggie. | afted o’er the fence and across the yard; when }) The armistice agreement between Poland and Russia became offective | Octobef 18. Thirteen days later, on November 1, the Polish government The armistice between the United States and Germany became effeo- Two years later, the United States government lis sti! imprisoning men convicted for expreasions of im hostile to If Poland requires onty 13 days to grant full amnesty to political prisoners, how much longer ought it to take the United States te do er eed rr THE SEATTLE STAR EVERETT TRIE NOU HAD PLENTY OF TIMG TO STOP YouR GBYSS Mack Or Ha CROSSING 4 TER THE CoP Rusw HIS Greisrme ploomnte Dr. Jas. L Vance Writes for The Star Today on Follow Your Heart BY DR. JAMES L VANCE ‘Thine & good prescription for hap TODAY'S QUESTION What city would you prefer te live in, outside of Seattle? ANSWERS [rane than matrimony. I am not so © but the wixest thing to de im f: mt of the questions that omat “hf ms ; pines, and it is not a bad one for | JOUN CHRISTIANSEN, 4333 Bag-laury. Of course it in better if the | settled ta Just to follow the heart, ley ave-—-I'd just as #000 live in BY | heart vote the mmme way, But if] ‘The heart is pot mercenary. It > other city. they conflict, follow your heart. Tinet calculating. It i usually the ry JOHN CURTIS, 940 Towing st—I| know the heart i# not infallible, but | pest in us storming the will and have lived here now so long I don't} in the head? I have known people|rushing to the Nps. “As ® mem bnow of any other city that interests | to reason at great length, to ponder | th eth, no in he.” me. agd meditate, to counsel with friends, _ oe MRS, NANNA DANIELS, 1809 | % weish the pros and cons, and then | ne Kune, Chiropodiat. Boe Clamttieg, ave-—Senttle firet, but if it} Plunge head first into the worst. | be some other city, I'd choose | apolia, MES. V. J. MeGTLAL, 5007 16th ave. N. EI don’t think I'd want te live if T couldn't tive here. MES, J. 8. BKAISDEN, 4619 Ninth I have known @ girl to choone her mate with her heart, and walk atruight Into beuven. Kor the heart is guided ana con- trolled by love. It does not ask what is expedient, what is wise, what in I'M A PapsstTriaNn [— OnS WHO WALK NEW MENU | —_ ave,—Don’t take me away from se. | PrUdent, what will pay. It doos not Doston Baked Beans ....-15@ Wweo JOVRNGYS attic, unio, perhaps, it ts to give og what fe anything It just falls Mexican Beans ....-.00--10@ ' Me & chance to see what Honolulu Macaroni and Chesne ...15@ Finest Pie, per cut ..+---10@ GANDWICHES Cod Meat and Cheme ...10¢ Hot Hamburger ..--—--15@ Hot Cakes and Syrup .--20@ Doughnuts and Coffee ..15@ Best Coffee in Seattle HOYT’S 322 Pike St, a¢ Fourth WE NEVER CLOSE The onty Ching that can make « happy marriage is love, Love is blind to the bad and arguseyed to the good. Lave adores being unself. | ish. It counts mcrifice sweet. “Love | beareth all things, believeth ali | things, hopeth all things, endureth | all things Love never faileth. Therefore, follow your heart. We must be sure it is the heart and not the silvery moon that Is call- ing. It is sometimes hard to distin- guish between sentiment and the sentimental, One should be well out ot adolescence before he takes sert- ously an affair of the heart. But my prescription has a wider looks Ike. 1) AD SEATTLE? QUESTIONS 1. How many miles of Puget ecund shore line are in trade relations with Beattie? 2 What ty Seattle's annual aver age temperature? What wae Puget sound's salmon pack last year? Unswers Toneday) PREVIOUS au ESTIONS . There are over 100 auto deal jers in Beattie. 2% The Sigures on the movement of local venues whow that 1,683 venseln | of @l) Kinde arrived at this port last | month, 3. Golf ts played in Beattie every y in the year, over five fine EXPECTANCY BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE Expectancy! expectancy! what eontacies you bring aroma of ambrosia and the first green glints of spring are the hope bebind the brow which burns the midnight You are the dulcet dinner-horn which sings for those who toll LESSON IN BUSINESS “Pop” “Yes, my som.” “What in a gurdener?” “A gardener is a man who rales a few things, my boy.” “And what * 4 Germer?” “A man who raise a bot of things.” “Well, what is a middleman, pop?” Expectancy! expectancy! our wherefore and whereas! Man lives by what be longs for, but dies by what he haa ‘Tin the bubbie on the beaker sets the eager eye @ahine While satiety lies sleeping with the visage of the swina Expectancy! expectancy! # quite the mood for ma * I love to linger on the edge of what is going to be, Mind he's © Se sae Talnes ‘The only perfect joy ie that which hasn't happened yet oo" s my Yonkers Ga- And the greatest thing in life is always what you're gving to get. j (Copyright, 1920, N. BE. A) / pants, but 1 have to have the but. Behold How Goodszstee= (Copyright. 1920, by Frank Crane) | “and the French, who came with no] le, “Rehold bow good and how pela little skepticiam coneerning the re ant a thing it In” eried the Psalm-| sults of the conferences, were much jfere, As always happens when meo| + | met together, we found it easy to be come friends and exchange viewn; to lagree with pleasure and disagree without anger. The eptrit of the con- ference exemplified a will to pro WHY, TO BE SURE “It's got so theme days all you have to do ls press a button and you can get mort anything done.” “I don't know; I cao prew my quam benum, quamque jucundumf” . Itaabout time for it te rol out of the church, into the street, and 00 the city, the nation, the world with dixpostng harmony. Yor “Getting Together” te the most ancient, time tried and effec tive cure for all ils economia, po Iitfaal and social. It has recently been exemplified tn Hruseela, where representatives from the nations gathered tn the interna Uenal financial conference. ‘When armed invasion threatened | the world we found that only by ret ting together could destruction be averted. When the armies of the allies wnited as one the war was| mote among nations the co-operative soon over. epirit for which the league of na So, dino, In the presence of the | ons stands.” world threat of debt and financial| Now let us go on. collapse, we are realizing that by| Get together tm the matter of Inbor getting together we can find a hope, and capital. and the basis of @ rational optimixm.| Get together as churches, ‘The general feeling of the delo| Get together in polities, not es ates wan that the conference ac-| partisians, but as Americana. complished all that could be expect-| And get together as nations to o4 of it, “Even the German dele | plan for the peace and progress of gates who came to Brussels with | the world. some apprehension regarding their! Even the Irish might try getting reception,” mays the press report, Package is germ proof The ends aresealed by electricity — so that all the goodness and flavor are retained for you. Each stick {s separately wrapped, to keep it fresh and clean till you need it—after | every meal or_cigar. Whitens the teeth. clears the throat, sweetens the breath, aids appetite and digestion—a great benefit fora small price. And The Price (s Still 5° SAVING THIS WEEK and your money will earn a full dividend From the First of the Month. It means putting your money where it is abso- lutely safe, and where it will bring you real earn- ings. For the past nineteen years our Members have never earned less than 5% RESOURCES ARE NOW OVER FOUR MILLION DOLLARS Puget Sound Savings & Loan Association PER ANNUM DIVIDENDS ip "ero THE Vi VI: ed