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THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1920, & | He Loves His Cane | BY DR. FRANK CRANE | (Copyright, 1920, by Wrank Crane) Bu CONDO The Seattle Star By mall out of city, $0 per month: # montha $1.60; @ months, $2.75) year 14.64, im the State of Washing Outside of (he state Tho per month, $4.60 for € montha or $9.08 per year, My carrier, city, Ide por week. Yes, < SAW YOUR PICTURGS In THE PAPER. AND, OF RSE, YOU FURNISHED (—% = ° : U ¢ Bl 1 $s | Fore! In “The Blue Bird” Maeterlinck brings out the fanciful idea that things: : Diset pt tte! De erested tn the effort to ‘ in well as folks have souls ‘ ples of the nibtick will be interested tn fforts of the Seattle TODAY ‘The Bread, the Wood, the Butter, and the Ike are all Persons. I I F Park Board to eliminate the 10 per cent war tax charged by the federall| Who makes the ‘This i# one of the joys of madness, which perhaps bas more amuseménts government for games played over the municipal links married or an th sanity Today's Rest Bet: Guessing was} For every 18 holes played over the city course, golfers are taxed four A WERS n Hecht tellin of an Interview with a friend Couperua, one of the owns the Pol cents, This constitutes—aa mbers of the park board direc’ c atest of foreigners literary who is ap American fad a ease - or ard-—an indirect tax) serge, MARY REAM, 1112 Seventh It was in Amsterdam, Couperus was to have come, but he had ® Bris wens the mor nap? jon the municipality, as the money would otherwise be «pent on improving| ave, “td pends on the individual t h 1 1 f morning dom omach ache and ¢ t " d locks? | the links If it be considered as a personal tax on the golfers, it still y 2 NIBLIOTT, a3 This shor t . ed thet owe I have read one of Who owns its keys and locks? MR LOUISE . 4 This should not > A them, b Bs mot above the Jap affects the eity indirectly, aa the Increased cost undoubtedly deters many|Nob Hill ave erally speaking |Couperus’ works. 1 ige he bas the stomach ache all the time The railroads and the docks. devotees of the game I'd prefer a settled person, althe | Hecht calls these grotesques, studies in decomposition, ee Mombers of the park commtaston contend that the federal government |#ome unmarried women are perfect juavering harmonie t fle and ways Couperus ts “‘a fastidious, . OR, WOOD THAT WE KNEW | cannot levy a tax for golf play ver municipally-owned property. They | ly lovely” maniac, playing with t elicate garbage of dead bodies p> dying Sout) The Lippy crowd claims it's a|PA¥e received communications from other cities, maintaining municipal] EDWARD M’NACE, 2103 Queen But, mad or not, this author emed, in ey X. be pris Lamping conspiracy to grab off the | !imks, which declare that the internal revenue department does not charge| Anne ave A married woman diversion, and for whom whimsicality needs no apology, by bis pure . THEM the war tax F loyal love for his cane fevernorship four years hence, the . war ta MRS, T. J. ORION, 610 Ninth : wisi o * tayoratty two years hence, the coun William T. Reeks, deputy collector of revenues here, has held that the]... It makes no difference | “How can @ man,” said Couperus’ friend, “be teal 4 who re - * Slimanic electiona one year hence, |*t®* !s legitimate. Me has not ¢ uulted any possible departmental rv DES | mye,” with his walking-#tick It ie t ng. He takes it for wend a . end one or two other things at Washington, Perhaps he ts wre ng and the bark conenlastonere think | sms. MABEL M. HILL, 61 cars, leaning ip hee ont of bee window. He pave oo rs k. q * ore he is Ney are, going to take the matter up with city legal authorities| MTS . in the theatre, Hé is devoted to the walking-tick, a Dittiniocinnes Oc te te bl. heen, | and, if necessary, with our representatives at the national eapital fond ave, NT think marrh % COUCD TOte I BECAUSE fl IP eacis opposite hin at dinner ‘ tng that secret? To know that Wood| There is where the ba re no troublesome foursomes on the | Women are — bie, « They at THE PHOTOGRAPH WAS He once had a watch that he loved, but it stopped, and he fancied it] B be worth the price of groceries fairway. Becks has had his drive at the ball, Did he slice? Where docs | ¥#Y* have the a TAKON BEroRee You Vi insulted ‘him, and after denouncing it bitterly, hurled it Into « canal he lie—on the gree ear t > t ba * live hermit until he met his wa yntick, le believes, . opin tasrt he it n the & . up? Or in a bunker LOST Your TesTH He liv hermi hen walking stick Bd ers vob Apartment house owners and|, /t !* Dow the park board's “honor.” Will they make the green? Golf n 7 AND $5 PER CENT||| know, that inanimate objects have souls vastly superior to 2 ‘ . fans are watching their drive carefully, uty misshapen consciousness of people i Managers passed resolutions pledging ! onde tt themselves to vote for Lippy. And] *°F* SMILE OT YOUR HAIR IY Sinoe reading this I feel more kindly toward Couperus, Who ean help ‘ We thought the Japs had no vote in pane a 4hu ne, a yr a ane who can love a stick? F 1. 8. ° 1ER W : east it's clean. : the U. 8. aa Double-Minded BY ROGER W. BARSON ; ‘A good many of our modern poreurs and spotlighters have, spiritually Oh, a newspaperman ‘Who Gfee net Enow Gis ‘wales of || peaking, dirty fingernails. They perk their poor fragment of sense into Oe _— oa 1 1 third years of a child's life there is a period of|a cheery and brave smile? anything that shocks, and do not even object to obscenity. They reming when he reflects the moods of those about him, people are wo grouchy and bi Be ‘Take starting the furnace If moat p ple are #o grouchy ult || me of what Macaulay wrote of the Byron 3 « that laugh, weeping with thome that weep, and/ , < : . ew te! f ethics com 5 u miserable aa thelr faces Indicate From the poetry of Lord Byron they drew a system of 4 ‘Pheee chilly fall days. 4 mbarrassed and unhappy when mother and father indulge in| what is the poor old world com pounded of misanthropy and voluptuousness, a system in which the two 7 changing m petting him one moment and scolding him the next. At : ' t 4 love your neigh! ng to great commandments were to hate your neighbor and love y bor’s : He takes the exchanges | this period the child has hardly learned to think of himself at all we se a Adee See. CoE 4 Home from the shop | He has simply breathed an atmosphere. If this ts consistently cheertn| f you are not happy, at lew wife (’Exchanges” are papers ‘That the editors swap) make your face look happy jhe grows & other mood consistent cheerfulness and does not feel at home tn any If the atmosphere is doleful, that mood seema natural to nd it is hard to feel entirely like himself in hearty laughter or oundings It is easier to be serious or even solemn. whem the atmosphere is always reed with electricity and sun Jamong them a “red radical Tt hi ndorse one rather than the other of | aiq, ne would think the whistle hadi these two! It's an insult that would | blown and the cannon ball had fallen © met with death, if the author! on pis head. There isn't a returned were an individual; but being a cor-|soidier boy, nor a father, mother, Don't admit that you are not hap py in euch a glorious world Smile while it is hard to do ao and will soon become easy, We al Each and every morning, Up betimes, He starts up the furnace But tt And keeps the furnace going With the Portland News. a é * ’ shine is constantly interrupted by storm it is hard for the child to feel | know that “The man worth while | poration, ite cowardly author can | sister or relative of a returned s0 5 With the New York Times. entirely at home tn any mood whatever the man who can amile when every hide behind the “articles of incor: | ajer boy that should not Reap re ng And then, a little later, when he begins to assert himeelf, if he ts | thin dead wrong.” poration” with impunity immediate retraction of the insul E . ne . in | thing goes dead fe mn. * a ‘Times burns out and constanUly crossed and oppored by thore he loves, chided for going his} yet us be worth while—and amile There isn’t a man in the corpora E. M. FARMER. re ‘The furnace starts to ji, own way and bullied into submission to the will of ott finite tion, from its down to the | —————~ ne led into «# n to the will of others, a very definit It is an insult to the Creator to go So he bundles in the Herald conflict ts» set up within hin © wants to be “good” a k merest typesetter, who would dare a > o him. He wants to t good” and obedient to win | out into His beautiful world with a} s And the old Chi Trib. the love and praise of his elders, He also wants to go his own way in|sour face. | |walk into the hall of these returned N TAD . aa spite of them. He cannot do both at once, and he is uncomfortable which-|” jrorget the injuries and hurts that | soldiers and call the smallest one 8 T A BR WA = ihe sak ager re ever he does. So he alternates, humbly obeying for a while and then.|/have been dealt you by thoughtless | / ‘ mec nee A aber Se : ie oc wl jn when he cannot stand it any longer, bursting out in defiant independence. | hoopla | * i The on Ary Mion It ls the beginning of a weak and unhappy life; and the parents that] ‘Those things need not.move you. | ° f | r Sea make the atmosphere around a child ehould avoid it like the plague Laugh at ‘em. SAYS LIPPY WAS NORTH or being there during the Spanish Pi —— — - eric a idin’ ¢ Reads the comic strips to cure Think of the other tives with) WHEN WARK BROKE OUT = 04 a, pe he tracted er agg * ‘The antedreakfast blues The Ri Crop which you come’ in contact—lives| joditor The Star: In your publiea- : The country ts learning two lesson From the New York Sun. With the Boobville Bleat millers will handle rice only thru the association. will then be sold only at fixed prices. Record and Examiner, . American and Mail, ‘Yellow journals, Sunday sections, Papers pink and pale— Pulitzer and Scripps-McRae, Baker, Hearst and Mills, Bless ‘em, each and every one, ‘They cut our furnace bills. pound. Last year the retail price was around 14 cen tana, Texas, Arkansas and California, doesn't hope grower from lows. On the contrary, the average loms of 1,372,000 acres may run as high as $ But wi ruin, A campaign to educate American consumers on th Dut of the’ Mouths of Babes “Now, Edward,” said the teacher, may spell ‘kitten.’ ” a,” said the embryo lext Gourmont, French philosopher. His logic was in this fashion no,” exclaimed the teacher, hasn't got two Ts’.” ours has,” replied the ob Eéword. ee “Papa. did you ever see an arti ‘ficial whale?” - | “There is no such thing, my son.” |. “Then where does artificial whale | Bone come from?” De eee ‘Three-year-old Ralph had fallen ‘and burt his knee, and as he sat in ila little chair rubbing the injured he suddenly looked up and said: , did God make me?” “Yes, dear,” replied his mother. “Well, then,” continued the youth The leaves to the ground return and Nature them ou the twigs in the spring as fresh and as br’ Not so with the days. tion.’ Other days will come but not the same days. to your eye, to your that were light gree when new days come your soul art and your brain they will im never deceived. are never the same. Each day that fell from your carried away a little of you as,a souvenir and that you |0. View with carelesmness, then, the coming and the but guard your days for what they are—bits of a gift of time from the endlewly varied reservoir of that of cotton growers, who have lost millions thru collapse of the domes The best grade of rice will be delivered to wholesalers at 64 cents The association, representing 75 per cent of the rice growers in Louis marketing project, such as the aasociation proposes, the growers face | food product will be launched along with the marketing system. Days Never Return “There is a fall of days as there is a fall of leaves,” wrote Remy de|t?? “Derry” itself has #0 advertined laboratory and in the winter renovates and renews them and replaces A day that is dead will never know rewurrec- You may pray for the green leaves of summer and when they come, dark green and brown the year befora Tho they be as much alike as two carefully matched pearts, two days| ‘yyrigorinc.couct You are older and the mate to that day will find you so and treat They need you. It is worth while to try. The milled product ite per pound. to save the average | ing to the South, per acre on @ crop | Carolinas. ithout a cooperative tle recognition. that are unhappy or unfortunate. The cranberry in Just as American Der lin everything as the Indian himself Native to the swamps and bors of ‘ww Foundland, it ranges far Weet into the For a long time the cranberry got It was allowed to grow in its mosey home and at tines * value of rice as a started. wae harvested tn a haphazard way. Then, about 1810, Its domestication It waa improved both tn favor and size, and the good qual! tien have been so dwelt upon, and ite virtues, that “eat more cranberry” campaigns have takes them to her ight an ever. holidays.” But be the same leaves life with its ending it will never return. | vanishing of leaves, | Dever twicethe-same | time somewhere be. actually ‘The winds of the earth flutter the sere and yeflowed leaves from |unched and with no little muccens. the trees. Some wind of the infinite tears away the days, one by one been The American people now dispose of over fifty million quarts of cran berries a year, and mainly tn that very short season known as “the the cranberry is going to be an all-season crop mo far ; Qn ite consumption ix concerned, for |ways have been perfected whereby [evaporated cranberries, making suuce But/ag if fresh from the vine, have al Little Harry was saying his pray ets Having got as'far as, “If I should die before I wake,” he hesi tated. “Well, ‘mother. “Why,” was the unexpected reply, “then we'd have a funeral.” see “Tommy, you'll be sick,” sald his Mother, as he handed his plate for METROPOLITAN Witte MON. DEC. 6 STARTING MAT. WED. AND SAT. SPEC BARGAIN MATINEE WEDNESDAY 50c-$1.00 F. Ray Comstock & Morris Gest Present then what? said his ecked at me and I'm getting even.” ful philosopher, “if He's got any| yond the farther star, where the past is present, and the present and VAPORUBSB Bieows left I wish He'd mend my| future are blended. | Over 17 Blillion Jara Used Yearly a eee ‘ ——— mete tion Monday on the front page, in large type, under the headline “Save 1—Eat more rice; Give them your amiles and £004) the Port,” you sald it ie t 4 but natural, under the circum Finds The Star of Interest, 2—Market rice efficientty. cheer “In 1898 the Apaninb-Amerioan | ones to reply at win Leaio ‘And "bout the time he's done Southern rice growers have raised two billion pounds of the cereal this| By simply being happy and serene. jwar and the Kiondike rush made|iio' i) 2 Ut lal Mo Lippy Fire requires assistance year and can’t sell it. Their predicament is little if any lees serious than | 7° bring joy to many lonely hearts. | things hum in Seattle, Geo. B Lamping joined the colors and serv tle market. Biers kant oe ed in the Philippines; Thomas &. thal polnt. Taéy Wife aloft is calling: ‘To remedy matters, the Southern Rice Growers’ association has com- Lippy, who had been physical di ee ; Seri ‘ “Hey, there! Heat!” pleted plans to establish complete control of rice marketing. ‘This will be| Th C nbe rector of the ¥. M. C. A. joined the | ay oNPARDONABLE FOR TEN semi-annual dividend page this Bo he satisfies her raving» accomplished thru contracts with every rice miller in the country, The| e Ura rry rush to the gold fields.” INSULT Association has never paid less than 7% on By this letter I do not wish in any way to detract from the honor- able service of Col. Lamping; yet I cannot let pant such @ mingtatement in relation to my old-time friend and neighbor, Mr. Lippy. I personally know, and you could easily have found out, that Mr. Lippy went to the Yukon long before the Spanish war was thought of, and was up there when It began. In all fairness to Mr. Lippy you should state the truth about this on your front page, and as publicly an you havé made the glaring min statement. If you do not care to do thin, then please do me the favor to publish thin letter promptly. Yours truly, THHRODORE. N. HALLER, 606 Minor Ave. FAltor’s Note: The Star cheer. fully publishes Mr. Haller’s letter. with Mr. Lippy’s going to Alaska, ne Ma, mtn ren the The Most Wonderful Play THE UNIVE RSAL CAR This paper has no fault to find| would destroy litheal character assnaning, in the at- tempt to make votes for Mr. Lippy, | branded Lamping as a “Bolshevik.” was making a fortune in Alaska When he got there s not the exsen. the funds deposited by our members. The interest is compounded semi-annually. NO CHARGE is made for opening or clos- ing an account. Funds subject to withdrawal after your account is ninety days old. We wel- come new accounts of from $1 to $5,000. MONEY RECEIVED on or before the 4th is credited with interest from the 1st of the - month. Editor The Star: Immediately fo! lowing the indorsement of one of th: candidates for port commissioner by the Soldiers of Foreign Wars, an aft jernoon paper prints on its front }page a cartoon characterizing that |5 indorsement as that of red radical: | iem. Why? Because the candidate the boys indorsed is not the candi. | date supported by it. i What i there in this port elec | on that furnishes an excuse for | such an insult? Who, I would lk to know, has a better right to take active part in this country’s elec a tions than the boys who faced death |=) VUSNVUONA NAN BUAANA OUI LAA UNH AAA EET EEARERE HEA AU GONAL OLA UUGULANOOANONHAGNOAUEAONAEAANUGHY meee SEATTLE SAVINGS and LOAN’ country? ASSOCIATION 9S3O9D-SdAVE. UAUTUNUNAAANARSUAAANG ALG NAGNNUAAAOHAGTAUONOUNAALGAAS ACOA UUEUSAOULSESUGSOGL UG AuUONL RRL A PE 2) AC) business men, Americans, patriots And to charge our returned soidiers | with being red radicals, men who |: the country they fought for, because they choose to EXPERIENCE By George V. Hobart Now in Its Seventh Year of Continuous Success BIGGER AND BETTER *WHAT DO You _ KNOW ABOUT | _ SEATTLE? | QUESTIONS | 1. How many bullding permits Were issued last year? 2. How many tons The Ford Sedan with electric starting and lighting system, with demountable rims with 31-inch tires all around, is a family car of class and comfort, both in summer and in win- ter. For touring it is a most comfortable car. The large plate glass windows make it an open car when desired, while in case of rain and all inclement weather, it can be made a most de lightful closed car in a few minutes, Rain-proof, dust-proof, fine upholstering, broad, roomy seats. Simple in operation. Anybody can safely drive it. While it has all the distinctive and economical merits of the Ford car:in operation and maintenance. Won't you DIVIDEND from DECEMBER Ist All funds left here this week will earn a of cargo “passed over the plers of this port come in and look it over? 3 we pond industrial estab- THAN EVER full dividend from the first of the morth. — iclaurtn | rs low many indus! es with And another reason why you should A lishments here? | as : — Alfred G. Ayerst, Inc. Clark-Baker Motor Co. | (Answers Friday) | ueuaee? re of Forty on kG: SSeS =— 1830 Broadway, le oe Way Tenth Ave. and Jackson St I PREVIOUS QUESTIONS yers Penrerrsserye East 126 Beacon 532 ; pond Beer Court Judse 3. |] Musie, Comedy, Drama, START SAVING Hugh Baird Central Agency Co. tle in 1892. Songs THIS WEEK Fourth Ave. at James St. A, F. (Bert) Blangy, Manager | % The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific ex ' position was held here in 1909. 3. There are over 370 restaurants | in Seattle. | Elliott 750 +L. M. Cline Motor Co. 1102 EB. 45th St. Kenwood 31 Broadway and Pike St, East 320 @yy: . Higgins & Matthews 315 Nickerson St. Queen Anne 74 Nights—500, $1, $1.50, $2. Saturday Mat,—50c, $1, $1.50. SEATS NOW BIG OYSTER SALE is that you will start the best habit in the world and join thousands of our mem- bers who, for 19 years, have never earned less than 5 per cent annual dividends. HE SEEN AND THE UNSEEN | - Wm. L. Hughson Company 500 Kast Pike 404 Thursday, Friday and Saturday PER ANNUM | ieee Ors goes 5% DIVIDENDS i] rer pine BBS | Municipal City Fish Market Resources now over —Also at— Four Million Dollars to's | || Virginia Oyster Co. Pat yr FRYE'S CENTRAL MARKET Between Union and Pike, on First PUGET SOUND SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION The most for your | money. the beat for |your ‘mouth, the |eafest for ' your |health, ts the guar- antee given by DR. EDWIN 4 wn ie Woman to Clerk—Have you invis | fle hair nets? “Yes; we have.” “Will you let me see them?”