The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 25, 1921, Page 2

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sHE SEATTLE STAR AS OTHERS SEE THE WORLD Editorials and Comments Reprinted From Various Newspapers A Timber Monopoly! That’s What the Snell Bill Means, Says Gifford Pinchot DITOR THE STAR: The Snell forest control bill purports to be a bill to prevent the devastation of privately owned timber lands. In fact, it is a bill to promote a monopoly of lumber, in the hands of a few great owners of standing timber, Four-fifths of the lumber in America is in private hands, and half of that is owned by 250 holders, the great bulk of whose holdings is on the Pacific coast. Within ten years the great majority of the states, | containing by far the larger part of our agriculture, | our industries and our population, will have to go to | the Pacific coast for the supplies of lumber, without which they cannot carry on their work. The Snell bill would leave it to state legislatures to decide whether these indispensable forests and forest. lands shall be devastated or kept at work producing lumber. | The great timber land holders of the Pacific coast believe it would be easy for them to prevent the pass- | age of any laws affecting them to which they are op- | posed in any Pacific state. The clear and obvious fact is that the Snell bill is) not supported by the timber-owning interests because) they want to be controlled, but because they know national control is the only control they have to ear. To them state control means no control. So long as national control can be avoided, they will be safe from control of any kind. " kasi, Passage hd the Snell = would be ed nee Meta ten have toon detective, the | tive step at this time possible to put into the hands of a| eter’ may aS Shen ‘Bosace, | little group of Pacific coast lumbermen a monopolistic | ‘the © parma atadlpea eagaaag power over the farmers, the wage-earners, the manu- ; r . ¥ facturers, the business men and the rent payers of the! GIFFORD PINCHOT. SEATTLE PAPER WOULD SURE? ER PACIVIC COAST TO JAPS "(Prom the Seattle Dally Wireless) ‘The Wireless has never made it a point to proclaim tts patriotiam, but one thing Its readers will never see it do ts to advocate the surrender | of the Pacific Ce to the Japanese. The Post-Intelligencer is doing that very thing when ft attempts to prevent the legislature from passing the antiallen land bill, for it knows as every thinking person must know, that the J: ene and American peoples will never live side by side in harmony, © the Japanese suc ceed in establishing themselves here in sufficient numbers a struggle for | race supremacy between them and the American population will be on| until one or the other race is driven out Like the ostrich which seeks to escape the sand, the Post-Intelligencer shuts ite eyes to What no observing per fon can fall to see: ‘The startling rapidity with whieh the Japanese have fantened their hold on the soll of this state and on its economical life. Twelve years ago, w the first large antiJapanese convention was | held in the Seattle Labor Temple the Post-Intelligencer referred to the delegates sirable citizens who should iven a coat of tar and An umbilieal hertna, such ax | feathers. day, recognizing the universal demand for Japanese exclu wion, it softens ite tone and tries to insinuate that the antiJapanese land bill in this state is of California origin If this were true we would take off our hats to California which has #0 long taken the lead in the fight to preserve this coast to the American people, But y fact Is that ant!Japaneve land bills are now pending in the legisiatur® of eight states and have already passed one house in Idaho, Oregon, Texas and Nebraska It is to the whame of this state that every one of ita papers ta not ont in open and emphatic advocacy of the pending land bill. We predict the day when the people of Seattle will erect a monument to the Seattle Star, the one paper which has had the courage and independence to stand up boldly for the American people as against the threats and intrigue of the Japanese government ‘ Seattle Star city, Ite per month: @ montha $2.76; year, TODAY'S QUESTION Which of the subjects you studied in school has been of the most use te — you? ANSWERS GEO. MACQUEBN, Arcafe Bidg~ Architectural drawing—that's my business. — in| MRS. B. A. SCHULT, 1415 Borem anger by burying Ite head In| ve-—They didn't teach cooking when I went to school, or that would have been MISS ESTHER BICKNELL, 4008 Fighth ave. §.—Gracious, I haven't finished school yet! HARRY F. MILLARD, 670 Ineke son st—I'll be darned if I knows What's the game, anyway? M J. BE. BILLINGS, Dawson ho Laugh if you want to, but I get most enjoyment out of poetry. Questions of health, sanitation, be answered If sent to ale HERNIA Q—t1 have a baby girl 10 weeks old land her navel seema to stand out By carrter, city, Le per week. Enterprise Association United Press Service Datty by The Star Pebiish: ing Co Phone Main 600 and Could anything very serious result from this? It is perfectly healed and she Is a very healthy baby. She scratches terribly, and no matter how tight I pin her band, she seems to work it up. “Anxious.” ase describe, if small is rarely serious A small amooth pad such as a coin or button covered with kid and held n place by a atrip of zinooxid ad henive plaster, i a simple method of EMBARRASSING “These traffic cases are annoying.” “How so, girlie?" “Our car was rather crowded. 1 |had to go into court and testify that I was seated on a gentleman's lap."— Louisville Courter Journal. retention. The dressing should be changed every week or ten days, and worn for several months. If the hernia is large, however, I should advise you to ask your physician to examine f at intervals waonally & hernia of this type may become strangulated and re quire a surgical You kin find some migtsty low men in high places, Ef some 0’ these fel lors don't be more keerful where they throw their cigaret butts, why, cigar ety'll be next, REMARKABLE REMARKS (7THOSE of us who walked with him for the last 20 years know that he never resisted a call, made no effort to postpone ah engagement or shift @ rexponaibility."—The Rev, M A. Matthews, preaching A. J. Rhodes funeral sermon Tuesday, eee “I am pontt there ts nothing whatever in F land to justify even an inference that anything can cause war between the United States and Great Britain.”—Sir Philip Gibba, eee “The alcoholic ward of Bellevue | anything hospital haa become a raving and|car deal, but think that the value howling asylum."——Dr. John W f the system waa very greatly Brennan, president of the hospital | misrepresented to the people during board of trustees. the campaign. And for the lack of 4) ies per information on the subject van u the people made the mistake of vot . The prescription for constipation that I used early in ing to pay too much for the sys» my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un- tem. The mistake was not in vot der the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid ing for. the ety te own and operate remedy, and I have never had reason to change it. I Beebe eid eed gg intended it for women, children and elderly people, and years, and every step which would these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim- extend the right of franchise ix a ulant as Syrup Pepsin. atep forward and away from despot 1 am gratified to say that under successful management my iam, while the step Mr. Farmer pieae into has eaves Seana now the largest selling suggests is a step backward and iquid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million jlends toward Geepotiom. And there bottles were sold by druggists last year proves that it has won jis mo other way. We must go for the confidence of mothers whose chief interest is the health of their children. ward to democracy and freedom or we must go backward to despotiem and slavery. Shall we give up what Itis respi A leasing to me to know that Pharmacopoeia. I consider Syrup Pepsin today little we have gained In the past the blcgest half of those eight million bottles were in the serious 82nd year of my age, as I did in | 140 years, or shall we press on bought by mothers for themselves and the chil- 1892, the best remedy a family can have in the and upward? I for one say dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for house for the safe relief of constipation and its Forward. grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50aver- accompanying ills, such as bilious- Yours for an extension vather age treatments is sixty cents; such a bottle will ness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite shan a. corneas, of Se rah, af last a family several months. and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and we. cK NEY, meen aks Tima yaa Ihave never made a secret of what isin Dr. fevers. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is a compound of Millions of families are now never without Dr. PARTICULAR ian Senna and other simple laxative herbs Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and I believe if you h pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics. will once start using it you will also always have ingredients are endorsed in the U. 8. a bottle handy for emergencies. “What wan the matter with that) lady who just hurriedly left the! store? asked the grocer, | FREE Address me Dr. W. B. Cakiwell, 513 Washington Street, Monticello, Minois. Everybody sow and then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. Write me today. Lives to See the Riresertaaien He Wrote in 1892 the Worlds Most Popular Laxative Remedy Founder of Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, long past Biblical old age, but hale and hearty—Still onderful achieve- ——% A WORD FROM JOSH WISE | | ay Many a wife gits hush money | | frum ber husband. * ee An Aurora, IT, man paid $1,000 for @ Machine that would make money, 5 after turning out one $1 bill the} thing wouldn't work. We can of many reasons, Frinstance, Use ink or typewriter, One side of paper onlp. ign your name WOULD EXTEND, RATHER THAN CURTATL, VOTE Editor The Star: In repty to the letter by BE. M. Farmer, who ob jects to what he calle “pure demoo racy,” will say: If he thinks that our present mystem of direct legisla tion ts pure democracy he ts very mistaken. 1 do not know about the Seattle street © Brindell, the New York extortion: | ee ease Sk haan “to | Whole United States. We don't see why the judge Mentioned the 10 years eee THO bal teams and the sporting are getting ready to go South ‘put the fans in ghape-for the com season, Hooray for Kennedy! EPRESENTATIVE H. F. KENNEDY'S bill, introduced Thursday .at Olympia, making Mother Hubbard dresses sateen lg high school girls cannot but meet with gen- et sporove:. io effo 0 revive the old Suffering mankind has endured for many months an foreseen peep Peta a endless panorama of skinny shanks, scrawny necks and|I am gtad of it."—Gov. B. W. Olcott, pene Meany It was high time that the legislature, |f Oregon. thinking always of the happiness and best interests of the} saith aseeiadas ok people, should introduce a law protecting the public against |, wine owed he Gti tae the atrocities committed in the name of Fashion. |Allce Duer Miller. And the wise provision which grants the superintendent a laa “ 4 jof public instruction the right to fix the maximum sum that |,ome taley. The time rey none | may be spent upon feminine attire will win the approbation when the state will have to take over of hard-working Dad and harassed Mother. The price of the housing problem and administer stockings is stiil zooming, lacy blouses refuse to tailspin |\ *t — uulity."—Rev, Chartes | and the cost of silk undies keeps gaining in altitude. crimes as a beverage can't pass thru| The sole fault that may be found with the bill is that it United States even when being | does not provide that everybody shal! wear pink and green | Shipped from one foreign country to} overalls and be limited to one suit of red flannel underwear . It certainly can't pass thru | per year! The Best Place to Begin HHARITY begins at home”—so Newport News, Va, believes, and believing, has put it into execution. That Virginia city has two problems: much I started pee medicine, back in 1875, there were no pills or tablets or salt waters for the relief of constipation, and no artificial ° remedies made from coal tar. “Probibition has come to stay BARELY POSSIBLE THAT E WILL WANT THE PAY THAT GOES WITH THE JOB | WANTED—Janitor for school in _ Fural community. Write giving age. x or married, and why you desire position. Address Z. R. 4.—Ad- t in Iowa City, Ia, Cit DR. W. B. CALDWELL TODAY Born Shelbyville, Mo., March 27, 1839 Began the manufacture of his famous brescription im 1893 ‘The department of justice has de that intoxicating liquor to be | eee “The man who secks to justify law breaking by calling all laws he doran't like blue,’ in disloyal to true jeivio lberty."—Rev. Wilbur F. Crafta, superintendent International | Reform urea, eee “There should be more Ifheral treat: men of the men who are undergoing vooational training in an attempt to make themselves self-supporting.“— Henry L. Stimeon, former secretary of war. at Virginia city has, wos eee b nempio. en’ “at the time France bas! “What was the matter with TWO—Municipal improvements to be done no wishes or wapeiione an far na new | tatoon?” ag eral empres. News will kill two birds with one stone by) Slomlen am Soeur: ie espeiatel Ft nary Bary Paes nerd of their starting those improvements now. : 5 wie eo aiedbtirnes An extensive city sewer improvement plan is to be put under way immediately. That means work for the out-of-jobs. But—Newport News will first give employment to resi- dent workers. City officials laid down this rule. “Men applying for employment must show that they have been here for certain length of time and have lost Jobs which they held in this city.” Not pleasing to unemployed of other cities? No. But, other cities, too, have local improvement necessities as well as unemployment problems. They, too, can provide the charity that begins at home. Woman, Know Women! HE most profitable study in the world is just people. Each human being is a page in the vast book of humanity. “He knew men,” explains almost greatness. All persons who win high place in the world study people. And right here, despite woman's already assured eco- nomic and political success, men have just a bit of an edge. Men have learned, thru centuries of experience, that knowledge of their fellows is power. Women, to a great extent, still have this to learn. So- cially she is far the cleverer of the two sexes. Beyond that point, in the business world especially, it leads to the drawing of wrong conclusions. How shall women study people? By personal contact | when possible, by observation at all times. Not critically, not consciously for the power to be gained view of South Main st. and ‘Windows.—Middletown, Conn, Press. . eee Unele Warren says be may ap peint some of the faithful to office on ition day. He'd better—if he to spend the next day pleas x eee Ponzi's press agent has sued for $4,067 salary. Ponzi shouldn't pay the claim. He received most of his Publicity without any press agent's ala eee ‘We lamp fm the public prints that Fanny Rice has quit the stage. Fanny is the wife of Nicky Arnstein, author of the well-known Arnstein theory. Si After looking over the White Sox Player list for next season, it’s our expert opinion that they can lose a Jot of games next season without | sanybody accusing them of crooked- ness. ee any great man’s - Aspirin Then it is Genuine | Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, jyou are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years and proved safe by millions, Accept only an “unbroken package’ of “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper directions for Colds, Headache, eee Al Jennings, the retired train rob- ber, says the modern bandit is no gentleman. A! and the police finally agree on something. eee Be that as it may, John Hirt, of Erie, Pa., is an automobile insurance adjuster who settles personal injury cases, As the Snow Fall Jess Willard ie haggling over the! money he is to receive for fighting --but whole-heartedly, interestedly and with utmost kindli- ness, that thru a better understanding of the world and its Pain, Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cont but few omte—Larger packages, Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticactdester of Salleyiioacté Light and flaky, crisp and tasty, fresh- from-the-oven—Snow Flakes, of course! Dempsey. When it comes to count eds we ourselves ma: ive a better service! ing, Jess can beat a referee. 7 y s! ms am ees This new fertilizer that kills weeds would interest our houscholders more “I feel sure we are in a period of | if it kept grass from growing high enough to mow. Feadjustment,” postcards L. P.| “Three of the boys in the shop today| Requests to clean up the city are interpreted by some City Halls to be were having a hot controversy as to| an invitation to clean it out. who could smoke a cigar down the| shortest.” An incomperable product of the West —you'll like them. Buy them from your grocer in red pack- ages or family tins, mi LS ETHICAL DENTISTS == What has become of the old-fashioned blush? Protect Your Health as You Would Your Home Don't ask for crackers— BY DR. WILLIAM E. BARTON say SNOW FLAKES, William Vaughn Moody wrote a clever poem 6n 1 heard, and may not quote with entire accuracy, but “The Menagerie.” The speaker was a balfdrunken | which rune eomething like this farm-hand, who had | aid the philosopher to the protoplasm) gone to town to nee the | etween use there's a mighty chasm!” show. He remained in| But the protoplasm had its come-back: the tent after all the “When I look at you, old man, crowd had left and un I'm almost sorry I began!" til the showmen put Among the forms of life on this planet, none ts so him out. After the | noble as man. Considered simply as a biological pro crowd had gone, he| duct, man is nothing less than Nature's sheer mi . Yet there is on this planet no organiam that nut within itself such a weight of misery and pain wer animals have no surgery, no medicine; and cage, and all the others | they sometimes die for lack of it.’ Their lives are were the audience: | sometimes saved by human intervention, If they “They looked knew what we know some of them that die need not mixed emotions die, Yet they are more healthy than we. They use| me!” thelr little knowledge with more wisdom than we. No wonder! As soon as we learn @ law of health we violate it, It was as if they had What have we to say to the forms of animal life maid, “We are the dix | that we have passed tn the upward struggle, concern. earded experiments of| ing the use we have made of our superb human nature in her effort | bodies and brains? Our answer must be a pitiful after . perfection, and| apology you are the crown of As the country clown discovered in Moody's poem nateeys attorts are you | they must gaze with very mixed emotions upon a r worth {t?" with noble bodies and glo dy A clever little Jingle is in circulation which I have! common sense PE TREES Parmenter He Without health fife ts scarcely worth tving Medical experts tell us that a large proportion of ailments get their start originally from decayed or missing teeth. Decayed teeth aro filthy and are absolutely inexcusable. A potson forms and is Pumped continually, in small quantities, into the system —enough of this poison and your system is full, fancied he eawa change in the situation. He | was the animal in the} P. C. B. GINGER SNAPS Another P. C. B. product with upon | Have your teeth corrected at once by specialists, who are all part owners of the business, Particularly crisp and fine-flavored LADY ATTENDANTS Your grocer can supply you “LLIOTT 4357 1604=4th Ave. Bank ForSavings Bldg | GSATIUUIOUUUULUCUO0000 ULL Lg Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. OPEN EVENINGS

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