The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 18, 1921, Page 6

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‘URSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1927. LINES (Che the party whe sdvertion tor a Jap chertiowt No doubt you are the gentleman who waved the big- gest flag; Who cheered the loudest and the most and never failed to brag About our gallant soldiers eating up the Boche in France— Yet hoped the war’d continue while you made their coats and pants. THE SEATTLE STAR AS OTHERS SEE THE WORLD Pattoriais and Comments Reprinted From Various Newspapers IMPROVE, DON'T KILLA, THE DIRECT PRIMARY (From the Tacoma Times) Inquiring Reporter. } As Text and Inspirati HE national circumstances under which Warren G. | Harding shortly will assume the presidency are not unlike those in which Washington delivered his first in- augural address and Abraham Li ome? is ne iad its Cuttplin, Cole ank Gee si ae Washington's task was the construction of a govern peaied. So, Loule Mart, thetr deputy, te asking the legislature, which for which the foundation had been laid. He was without | oontrotied by Gevernors Cartyon, Taylor and Reed, to repeal i That t* the counsel of experience and the young genius of democ-|the troe statement of the case, Hart draws the mlary; Carlyon, Taylor His brief inaugural address was vere pond My ate = gm ep mage meme in Washington | a» ; ” ste polition, tel Hart wimt to ' ; rayer “to the benign Parent of the human race. | SPNse Givect preuaaiy Sabres Pandey - pos pm wate a | ‘he civil war was coming to a conclusion in the hour of leystem, the olt bom. rule ayetem which Curtyon, Taylor and Reed want Lincoln's second inauguration, and the Union victory was They would boss politics without the trouble of @ primary election, a fight av: . aS 5 re! he real progressive people but a few days off. Before him was the task of rebuilding | ¥'t © ; a nation rent in twain. He was not permitted to live for) The direct primary tent perfect Ne section Iaw we ehall ever have " k 1 [Wal be perfect. But, the primary te much better than the old bow rule this work. cancus and boughtandsold convention, And some intelligent revising Harding’s job combines elements of the great tasks Of | could greatly improve tt Washington and Lincoln, There is new construction as ‘The direct privaary ten't perfect. No election lew te perfect. Ours ha» rec to be done. The nation is on the |*'%" % many Incompetent and weak officers. We Wenley L. well as reconstruction to be done. ; Fepes uah Laake Seek, oan enbaes ~af Stee ebeate doe threshold of a fresh start. The problems of Washington weak and vacates. many others, They’ and Lincoln were political and domestic; Harding’s are) The ol convention system gave we epectal interest, Tammany hal! too al . ke Levi Ankeny. economic and international. epecimens ce! . istic primary has this one gee@ featere at least: TM lets the people The first concern of the new administration ts — Poh Sonate ae ence “sa A pte ng ti Ngee ond tranquillity and prosperity. But, in view of our new rela- woud take this power away le ete bd Wak i Sx tnt gutinieas tions, neither is permanently certain unless the new ad- ministration discovers a basis for world peace that shall} manipulators who once arrogantly ruled this state, The Timea believes the pec have intelligence to rum thetr own politice serve as a foundation comprehensive enough and strong enough for the whole new economic structure that must be eattle Star | Be man, ont of city, Fee per month a ’ TODAY'S QUESTION Are you in favor of co elty and y covemument here? ANSW A acy was his only guide. WILLIAM 1901 | 18th ave KARL ¢ varre—It would interests of economy. WILLIAM D. GLYNN, 1409 Maat | eon #1 a why ft should be de CLARENCE HM. JONES, 890 Cen tral building—From a practical point of view, it is not feasible, We rarely get In politica! office men who can perform beth kinds ef functions. GRORGE OLSON, aretie club— There is no quew in my mind but that it would be far more economical than the tem. MOTE, h #0 Hotel Na nly be in the No doubt you were a speaker in the Victory Loan cam- paign (Yet kept your dollars working where they netted greater gain). No doubt while fired by noble thoughts to Uncle Sam, you sent An offer of the coats and pants at cost plus 10 per cent! end United Prem Service Padiished Daity by The Star Punten. | tne Ca Phone Main O00, But now, the war is over and we really can’t expect A guy who made it pay like you to offer to protect Or help a mere ex-service man by giving him a job— It takes a Jap in livery to satisfy a snob! —LYN FOX. enent . without the aid of bowsen, If « change to be made in the ele system it should be made more democratic, not lew democratic. «| give mere power to the people, net lena, One-third of the Jews whe served, |i the United States army in the WHAT DO YOU . KEAN BOLD WITMnDe an T .| World war were from New York DEAN JOHN H. WIGMORE | KNOW ABOUT “(= WRITES FOR THESTAR TODAY ON || pgeahat wn REGULATING LANDLORDS eyeing lereat bulk of tha trade of Aluska| ym Mann va Miitnot, some 40 years erected. | As the text for his inaugural address and as inspiration for the work of his administration, Harding, confronted jby discouraging difficulties, might well take the peroration jef Lincoln's second inaugural: , “With malice toward none; with charity for all; with | firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let bat the wind blows on forever on to finish the work we are in; to bind the be Pie us str RY JOTIN HL. WIaMORE . Mart gets it fixed @@ he ts to do all the appointing of employes and the | battle; nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the) and for his widow, and his orphans—.to do all and abolishes the} which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace Primaries wo that an old-time will nominate his succes We'll be pretty well “back to y” politically, eh? eee | | Revised version by the banitits r RM: @are not whe writes my coun | jamong ourselves, and with all nations.” Uncle Sam’s College NCLE SAM'S great university has started to increase its enrollment. laws so long as they bet me live - _ & aadle from Germany mys the This is the 1921 way of saying that the army Kas launched la new recruiting campaign. The recruiting cy wants Rhine ‘you |7,000 men to join the Fourth division at Camp Lewis. Mudipset debenca ae Why should a young man join the army today? Five poe? lyears ago a large portion of the general public regarded th |peace-time army as a loafing organization. It considered lmost of the men who joined the ranks as chaps who were looking for a “soft s: But the war changed all that. Now the army is recog- nized as an institution offering a wonderful opportunity to lambitious men—especially young men—who want to make something of themselves. cer| The army has branched ovt, and today it offers to a man lentering its ranks practically as complete a college training as can be found in any of the great educational imstitutions of the country. And instead of charging him tuition it _ jactually PAYS him while it teaches him the trade or pro- bet ringers fession he chooses. > We should think that at this time, when jobs for unskilled 8 atjmen are so scarce, the army would be a mighty attractive proposition. Masvime| The Seattle recruiting office is at 301 Mutual Life build- tmugure-| ing, just across the street from the Totem pole, “A Penny Saved—” ee oe een ree eee The first impulse of the hard-pressed salaried man with a family is to hoot at the admonition to store away a bank account ogee a of wie tls. =e 0 serambling to make the little old income sqyare up wi! ec bills at the end of the month. It has seemed to him that he was lucky if he broke even. The idea of storing away part of his income seems absurd- over all those jobs, but | the boys whe are whe ly out of the question. And yet, in most cases, ‘it can be “ done. Probably not enough to pile up a fortune in a few wee brought back which he | Al |many millions of American families are always hovering. budget. his business. Cut down your overhead; step the leaks. future. Truly American AIRMAN BENSON, of the Shipping Board, cautions | all operators of government vessels “not to be misled | linto the employment of foreigners” merely because of the llower schedule of pay. He points to the large number of employment whenever seafaring men are needed. An American merchant marine, to be truly American, needs more than the American flag flying from the mast. It needs American boats built in American yards by America work- they' men and they should be manned by American sailors. Then o_o be AMERICAN! “Greek Soom vs editor. ‘4 “By gosh, they're gonna get thetr! Suger's so cheap i must be the adulterants that keep candy prices ap Banny™ shouted the office wit in a camera alarm. Judged by moders gunman standards, Devil Anse Hatfield wasnt euch ° cee @ tough fellow. News syndicate gets excited over fact that Richmond, Va, has a Politicians have thetr ews ideas chout the ptwm glen Fi has sething to do with railroads, | —E | When @ woman says the wouldn't marry the best man im the world, Not when the whistie blows. | she means she wants a man with a few human foulte, ose 0. HAPPY HUSBANDS! husbands always happy? Hus pert Forty thousand germs are exchanged in every kiss, says @ Parts ex What's @ million or twe germs to a couple im love? years, yet enough to give the family man a margin of safety | d to keep him away from the brink of want on which so The answer to the family man’s financial woes is, start a Run your home as a business institution. Run it as carefully and with as much thought as a man runs Any stationery store carries a household budget or account book. Buy one and in its pages find the road to a better | Dean of Law, Northwestern University MERICA NEEDS LAWS which 1 will remedy ber serious housing situation, It te anid that thoumands of tymt- es in all parts of the country are | nome Certainly the state may |regard it as @ duty to provide them | with houses at reasonable renta, Laws thus far pamed have fre queniy proved unfair both to land jorda and tenants and many have been declared unconstitutional. I believe I have eurmested a oon measure which will gige Pt to be nd the man who reots tt, | The house that is rented or leaned Jorases to be purely private property and bece utility, The humerous re % the landionds @ practs joal monopoly of a public necensity Under these conditions ft le @ well emtablinhed principle ef law, recor nized by the federal supreme court, ASK FOR and GET Horlick’s ‘The Original Malted Milk for Infants and Invalide dvoid Imitations and Substitutes! Don't hide skin trouble-heal, it with eral an ugiy skin. They only Al in the pores and make the condi- tea worms, Rexinoal Soap cleanses breathe and throw off tmparities nel Ointment it rids the skin of tmberrasing defects, keeping it so the pores, giving them a chance to| Tle is why when used with Baxt-| clear and fresh it can hardly help | ago, that the wtate has the right to guard the public interest and to regulate the use of the property by the public and the profite it may carn Now, 1 eurgeet thac the various states enact Inwe declaring the bust nem of houwing, that is, offering houses for rent or lense, te be “af fected with « public interest." This same law would then ereate @ com- mission, stmilar in most reepects to the public utility commissions which regulate other public utilities, rail ways, rain elevators and the tele graph and telephone companies: This inw would bring the tenant he landlord directly under the trol of the state Hither might appear before the commission and ask readjustment of rents and the commission might rule with one in one cane and with the other in the next case . it ts an tmportamt fratere that this law would make ft pomsible for the #tate to decide each case on its own mertta. It would not compel landlords and tenants to ebry « rule which might be tuir to ona unfair te & second and give too great an edvantage to another. PARIS SCHOOL OF Arcade Bldg. Phone Filiett 6190 ter Aypoiniment | being beautiful. Af ell éruggiste, | which is approximately $156,000,000. | 2. Development of the Kittitas | high line canal is to reciatm 74,000 acres of fertfe land directly trtbu. | tary to Seattle | 3. The fret Amertcan passenger | line between Puget Sound and the| ports of the Orient will be tnaug- urated, according te present plana, with the salling of the 635-foot type shipping board liner Wenatchee, be lcounts, Navy tw | John J. Jorgensen, of Port-| land, has invented mechanic-| ally operated skates. All one has to do is to get tnto the skates, press down the heel and scoot. Miss Leona Berker PROPOSALS will be received by the Bureau ef Supplies and Ac- perunent, Washing- ton, D. ¢ ry 3h. ad until A 1921. for de dough mixing grinders to the Sound. Wash A to the suppl: otf Here Is IMPORTANT NOTICE NNOUNCING the removal of the Rubenstein Exclusive Pre- scription Pharmacy from the Green Building to the Cobb Build- ing, Fourth and University. Night Service The Rubenstein All- Night Service with our own deli from 8 a. m. te 2 a m. will be continued under the same personal direction that has char- acterized all of our service features in the past. Two Main Line Phones—Main 5620 RUBENSTEIN’S ESTABLISHED 1906 COBB BUILDING Your Husband What is left of him—> ‘unemployed American seamen, and urges that they be given | enjoy afl the comforts of a| ~ —- home and incidentally learn to, Boston deaf mute weds blind girl He can’t hear the lectures sheTl de as well as give in little family | Moer on the faults she can’t sec but knows he has ‘@earreis. Bachelors miss the scrap. privileges accorded benedicta they both enjoy wise and witty old deve a man about hubby such as are shown the popular film subject, “Topics ‘af the Day.” How true to life these wordings are, you may fudge from Phe following “topic” selections: “Bay, Jor, you ought to buck wp and Four wife who is running things at house.” (aadty): “Tt ton"t he known”——-London Anawern Husband: “Didn't I telegraph @& bring your mother with you?” Wife: “That's what she wants to me Gea about"—Sarkatoon Telegram | up. mani Why don't you your ” “Bhe's viewer than T am, and besitos, MM would be murder™—London Tit-Bits Mhe (during the quarrel): “You never ‘& wife like mem ~ “and I never deserved the rhew Bi ae but I got M, Just the same!” ito World. Officer wy neceomary: ro not | READY FOR OPPORTUNITY _ Most men of wealth credit their sav- ing days as stepping stones to later prosperity. They were ready for op- portunity when it came, It is well to: remember that while there are many doubtful propositions on t rket at present, your bankers 8 advise you concerning legit- imate and worth-while in ents. Sevings Department open every Saturday Evening from @ to 8 for your convenience. tH i “Why are you rushing slong t bundle?” “it's my wife's hat, style will change” York), “Ro you are gotng te send your wife to the country for « reat?” m, 1 need it badly.”-—The Crow's “You wavert much om the menn GMI, tt Goewn't matior, my wife ts eaxily Satisfied.” ‘Walter: “If she's Bam Megrenaorter a Chicago judge holds that tt te tmpoant- for m tan to steal from his wife. the language of Biackastone, judge, you © movthful!—New York Mail A “Tie Kind to Husbands Week” Praposed—seven daye in which non te be shot Louis Giobe-Leme- afraia ‘s Wear and Wor |The Seattle National Bank i Becond Avenue at Cotambia — Chkengo striker who stole a locomotive got sie months tn fall: in the! HOYT’S Rorton Baked Deans Mexican Beans ..... Macaroni and Cheese ... Home-Made Pie, per cut . SANDWICHES Coll Ment and Cheese ... Hot Hamburger ..,..... Hot Cakes and Syrup ... 2 Doughnuts and Coffee . Best Coffee in Seattle 5c HOYT’S 322 Pike St. at Fourth WE NEVER CLOSE grind and we are the oply one SMATTLE—ON FINST AVR xamination free, by graduate op- lanees lutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 3116 FInsT. ave Pheae Main 1550 MS ETHICAL DENTISTS How Do Your Teeth Look When You Smile? Benjamin Franklin ence wrote tn his Almanac: “Sal laughe at everything you my. Why? Because she has fine teeth.” Others there be who dare not Inmrh at all, leat people seo thelr teeth and like them less. Anyone may have good-looking teeth by following the advice of a good dentist. We employ only the most modern equipment and latest scientific methods, We have no hired oper. atore—all work done by members of the firm. Come in for consultation. LADY ATTENDANTS 16042 4th Ave | Bank For Savings Bldg: j OPEN EVENINGS HUHTTAEIC TEC When The Days Work Is Over I've got his strength, his SMILE, and the VIM with which he started the day. Many + mani struggling. oiling. trying to get abend but atthe end ofeach day, he is practi ye cally a PHYSICAL WRECK, while another man does as much or more work; and makes ten ai times more money and comes home to his family SMILING, full of life and“FEELING BULLY. This difference in men MAY BE DUE SOLELY to the difference in the AMOUNT OF TRON IN THEIR BLOOD—Today about one person out of every theee is said to suffer more or less from the great devitalizing weakness brought on by | malnutrition or lack of sufficient nourishment; which is caused NOT BY LACK OF FOOD but often by LACK OF SUFFICIENT IRON in the | blood to enable us to GET THE STRENGTH OUT of our food. FOOD IS WORTH NOTIUNG UNLESS YOU GET THE STRENGTH AND NOURISH- MENT OUT OF IT. In_fact it often happens that THE MORE YOU EAT THE MORE YOU STARVE as your diges- tive organs are unable to han- die much food, when your blood LACKS IRON and you often think you have stomach trouble when it isn’t that at all—SIMPLY EAT LESS AND | TAKE IRON. oxygen. oxygen, ae brain becomes dull it cannot think right YOU MAKE BAD DECISIONS; FOOLISH THINGS; YOUR INTELLECT IS POOR; memory often fails—no matter how smart be Bature, in your weakened physical and mental condi! are certainly no match for the strong, keen clear headed mm with plenty of iron in his blood. Although you may give pov renga ew or swords in a battle, the strong. 8 ow ways has cal . & decided advantage over @ So 2 woman should not blame her husband too mach ts nervous, tired and wornout, at the end of a doesn't make the MONEY and get alk as he shor it isn’t his tault at all. HE has the BR. he hw «TO DO, but it's IRON STARVA that is WEAKENING his BODY a: back in life. There co organic tron hy! bat take some 00 TRON at once to help kY TO "YOUR. nerves, Orgunic Nusennd tren obs YOUR: rganic Nuxated Iron often ite den you ereaman of "blood the bodily Gnd mental vi yor of iron’ when you have good Sus. wornout, nervous people th two Be iY wR are -O} EI Tr’e like the iroa in your blood. it have had nites h KEAN TS ON oven ent Risen sane Waal RAMAN WHENHISALOOD LACKS injurethe teeth nor diatur the tng een eeehy feling red in the morn: entirely different from ordinary you ir Yourself nervous. irritable w'! ich People usually take and whi and easily upset, wi you ¢an no longer do your day's work without being ali tagged out at night: or have paine screams the back and fe your face looks pale and drawn do not wait Until you go ail to pieces and collapee ina state ot ration or until in ‘weak: toed" Condition ‘you ‘contract. wore nevions ‘A% beens At all Pot obtain perfectly satistactory druggists. ENRICHES THE BLOOD-GIVI YOU NEW STRENGTH AND'ENER 4 |NUXATED

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