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THE SEATTLE STAR A , .JINDAY, APRIL 11, 1921. = —————— ce al The This Is a Free Advertisement (SETH TANNER]( AS OTHERS SEE THE WORLD Inquiring Reporter. | For a Vaudeville and Minstrel Editorials and Comments Keprinted From Various Newspapers , | | Seattle Show Tonight! MR. STILLMAN 18 STIL. IN HIS Jon a ae (From the New York Dally News) “The average American bi ‘ | js a pile of human junk. He |" TONIGHT a vaudeville, minstrel and jazz show will | Lf ‘The Stillman case does not wet any plensanter aa the days pass and sone SO ciaauen. wich ae | be given at the Metropolitan theatre. | rewelationa multiply. Neither does the National City Bank gain anything tere—Charies A. Eastman, sous l lby the publicity {te presidents ts recetving TODAY'S QUESTION lindian physician. val The Star recommends it unqualifiedly. If you q oe ‘There nay have been many divorce cases which have brought their Py | Y " principals Into a# much Unenviable notoriety am this, but If there are] What shall the Inquiring Reporter | u7¢ virtue were ax common an one veer. || haven't bought a ticket, do so NOW. auch we do not recall them ask today? might think, virtue would be on the os the “ Whether you can go or not, buy that ticket, for the “ |""Mr, Stiliman's offer af hin renlenation to the board of directors of the] seus. vy, 4, nHFE, 4122 Dayton at: front page.”The Rev. Francia By mad 6 month, or 00.00 Pe || : : MM | | hank should have been accepted and with alacrity ” y people think reporters | Duffy, New York clergyman. Fear. Hy carter, city, ise per week. || show tonight is for the benefit ef DISABLED WAR " y fo great a concern is « public institution. Its officers have practically Visor vey rg a reporters ane ents | VETERANS who are still confined to their beds in \ |tete af Seknerth eatienns pe Ha oe OL cabinet officers of mem) COLE C. BURTIA, Re “When | “If raltroad management wns chars Dally by The mar Putten near-by hospitals. | ea) Were Mr, Stillman comptroller of the treasury or a member of the| Will Beattie win « ball gees BA | erage by weet are ‘noun =e > soatund | There will be prafessional acts from the Moore the- a] United States shipping board, the president would not be long In de-| BEN C. LEVY, 2816 10th ave. N.:|labor conte would Mave Cenun oe t manding his resignation under the present circumstances, Wha ould you rather do or go Jett Lauck, Some —aa | . , jatre and other vaudeville houses. The Ballard Elks | essen Bi, resins Oe nis Gee of dirtolera eer teckibibd. re IREMMINTT |agreennentn’—W. Jett Lau will put on a minstrel show. Jazz numbers will be | [™ vided It was offered tn gpod faith MRS. M. M, BWIFART, 626 War-) Dr the leant at | i + ren ave: “How old ts a woman be- | contributed by service men. " fore she knows her own’ sana?” | Reo a--Adyertinomen’-_ |__ And you, Mr. Business Man and Mr. Professional Edit ’s Mail J. M. WILMOT, 6050 WFitth ave.|7 — |Man, and everybody else possible, must contribute of ‘ In the Mutors al B, Ms 20 captor nay gpection yee | TE CTI ON your money. ‘ Read the lives av great mon | econ hy Sante 22m | PRO | Musicians are contributing their services for the | %' ther don't seem to be much | onsECTS TO OUR STAND Of which the world would be well) 1, who tells that | From the Cont of | * hi f s 10 h. The sta exotne for not bein’ great, No [ON CAPITAL PUNISHMENT rid; hin victim was a decent citizen, bes toe Gea anit oH ct re evening—that means from $5 to $10 each. e stage | man can make ple, ; ».jearning bis living in honest work T 7 4 a (A . we tiem oll a! 6 Ske Editor The Star: | have been « su lenlarge the mouth will make a good ;men, thru their union, will contribute their work. The scriber to your paper for a number} Schmitt ts one more inatance of « | usband | i i i f 4 after your action in re-| trade which has hardly any risk, and | - og Union men, labor, theatres, actors and actresses are 4 ie Mt almost a duty, to persuade my|to any adventurous spirit. But let sc hor cat you win it 70m i i ake yo r. a man © jehm: ee hi i doing their part. ‘They have not forgotten the men we | fa ann ae at nat mace GUARANTY || se ie Soest ant oe had promised not to forget. How-about the bankers, | { to ctiminal punishment and the|(as he described) and sees that it BANK without | maudlin sympathy expressed for the | will not miss fire, he ts tying a knot ‘The cont of Mitigation and hg and the merchants, and the others? y ‘ foulest kind of murderers, is such |that will certainly press againet hin AND TRUST CO. the anxiety it involves is @ OUR D. Y 10N Rs toon 0 rh ig went to | | When they marched away, we told these boys that that I cannot longer feel Justified | own throat, and he will think very severe strain on mest anyone : | wen oh ie aie te shave, and re- in having your paper in my home. | seriously before he goes out on suc wand If you lone your prop a barber shop for a shave, and | nothing would be too good for them when they neving 780% Pere Ir al ay |e aaaneions anieeie ne it yom iene ee the barber also trimmed our 1 = hair bit, and remarked on a | | turned. man shall his blood be shed," is the! Confinement has no terrors, it pro- raha They h dS ffering f aes be ance pent by One wt he | le t that was wing vi ed. ome are sufferin: rom " rilest command given by One who, | duces no creepy feeling down the} “gay “at 64 ed ey “Rave. returyy by bd infarmation Le ag 4 dinder whatever name he may be ree: | spi But death 1s something dread: | a anand ‘Title Insurance protects you Why don't ‘you try Dr. | | wounds, others from gi They now ask us for very || ™ cdi cee ognized, is at least nominally accept- 4 let us remember that it gives not only from loss if your {ffum's Hair Restorer?” he | | little. They offer entertainment for the t contri-| Pa " ed as the supreme influence of Chris | the e uncanny feeling of terror | 4 1 title falls but % elle ey ae ue. ry Uan countries, This command was/and abhorrence to the would-be| ae tried Xt | bution of money we may make to ease their burdens. | _Risaee, teil me tf living continuatty | tiven long before Hebrews or Chrie-|eriminal that. ft appears to give to} lawnult if the tte ts at And soon we had a new crop Buy that ticket NOW! exhauat te in the air has any effect on a| tans were in existence, the editor of The Star. | tacked. [ee Direute, Call up the Metropolitan and order it. The number |"“"""* "**"" eee ares akin tor|psThe, Bast shows we that, ouch le ON SAVINGS . ie A The exhaust from an internal com niency and sympathy f “ . eee is Main 6211. |eustion engine, the type of enaine| zim all ens man hath will be! nade to lynch aw, something which, | HENRY KLEINBERG, Was ington The aftkle show <eninemenllnemceti used in automobiles, contains consid. | Ve for = a te, Ruth | Roush at times necessary, is always | Cha Is past and gone; able qmounte of carbo If that inhuman degenerate, Ruth | geniorable rf SKARD. Titl I And now we've time ° ° ° funusbden et ee mnie 4 be oh Garrison, had realized when she was | JOHN G. BOUTON remident. itle Insurance To trim our lawn. t Determination V1 1 peed atema, hie buying the polson 1 end the life of oti - m as may be fatal. ‘The constant tnhala.|4% !9nocent and respected woman | Company > . ; ala “Bootlegging, the national crime, ONORE DE BALZAC, French novelist, was a de-|tion of carbon monoxide gives rise | ‘hat she was assuredly buying 4 rope We dye your rags and af ee SUE Sorts og’ ip the tonto scendant of day-laborers. His father sought to dis-| to headache, anemia and other gymp- | {0m which abe must dangle # t)1 a4 carpets and weave Assistant Caanier. Under State Supervision view. There are times when boot-|suade him from the pursuit of literature. tome of chreale polsoning, we may be perfectly certain that her || them into handsome rugs. pa ws | } Ansintant Cahier. Assets More Than Mer. Foreien Dept. $600,000 Teasing seems the national life| “In literature,” said the father, “a man must be either! og victim would be yet alive. aver, At least it's often the life of! 4 king or a beggar.” “Very well,” replied the son, “I will) Green and red will go together.| ‘The same argument applies to the The Fuzzy Wuzzy Rug Co. Sr De Sine . * , Give @ man plenty of greenbacks | disgusting r by Isom White, Phone Capitol 1233 Wivet Ave. and Columbia 9¢. eee a King. and he can paint the town « deep red. } a worthless specimen of humanity ‘the party. SPEAKING OF OUR NEXT DOoR| For 12 years thereafter he battled with hardships and a me a(fatreme poverty ina are but today his books are rend AMMA every civ) LG CO e 5 Te Angels GEE ou sandaan” Ane It was Napoleon's determination, also, which made him Jot of em sing on Saturday nights,/emperor of France. This was emphasized when tho thou- @nly they sound like the other place.| sands of his soldiers were dying of the plague in Egypt, he WE VOTE AYE visited them to show that he was not afraid of the scourge. , Mary had a Thomas cat, To go, said his advisers, was to court certain death,| t warbled like Caruso; but Napoleon sneered, went, and contracted nothing worse | ore er ns deuen't dee’ |than greater self-confidence. Saar oot ena eee; City Employes and City or what. ' a saa OTT A MEMORY Time he recalls with aching heart| [ IKE all other citizens, it is natural that clty employes should have varying opinions on the several measures pert.! against which referendum campaigns are being made. But it is not fair to the city that any such employes should take part of the time owing to the tity to circulate petitions or to engage in any other work not connected with their duties. | Instead of it being a help to their cause, it is a detriment. The first thing a city employe must observe is his duty to give his employer full time. Political campaigning, whether it be the soliciting of votes or the soliciting of referendum signatures, must be strictly under the ban during work hours. There can be no exceptions to this rule. Sand Point AND POINT is undoubtedly a fine field for aviation. That was the representation made to the ple of | this county when they put up the money to purchase the) ° site. It was also represented’to them that the government be a college presi-!of the United States was all but eager to establish an pool his first move! iviation field here if we only gave it the opportunity. young idea how n Py We have given the government the opportunity, but a, evidently the government isn’t a very eager customer. It i: Pty * SA is taking its time about it. ~~ pies ouae feller: In the meantime King county taxpayers have a young Some thief has swiped fortune invested at Sand Point. { My new umbrellar, County Purchasing Agent Charles B. Wood urges the a, ublican organization here to get behind the project ‘The British have their troubles. | TCP! R Mew h result of taking over the Ger.|and to forward resolutions to the Washington delegation man merchant ships is that nobody|in congress. By all means. But in the future it might be Me building ships and the shipyards! better for the county purchasers not to purchase on a} re idie. And low wages in Ger.| bl * many hay led British ship owners to| Mere gamble. send boats to Hamburg for repairs. naiemmnmioioren ‘Won't somebody please demonstrate Uncle Bam's aloofness seems to be bringing the allied diplomats to time how see-saw can be played without, We may yet get what we fought for—awhat we wanted at the peace table | one end of the board being down a ene ether f up? Coste less to ship meat from New Zealand than from Colorado, Maybe D cana e i 4 ‘Widows, says the secretary of the the Chinese were wise in rained an: ate faahs ad of railroads, Widowers’ and Widows’ Social club, are lonelier than widowers. Y. but not long. eee A New York paper says Charlie K Chaplin faints when he takes a| vou don’t notice them until you grow up drink. We know a man who is worse | “ye oo off than that. He faints when any Now that the spring baseball season is on, the window glass industry body invites him to drink. should return to normaloy. | Organization of the Oregon-Washington Canning and Preserving Company. Capitalization, 100,- 000 Shares Preferred Stock, Par Value $100; 100,000 Shares Common Stock, no Par Value. ; : To meet the needs of a recognized and rapidly growing ind peculiar to West Washington and Oregon, the Oregon-Washington Canning Pein eae hs being incorporated under the Jaws of Delaware with a capitalization of $10,000,000, Pre- ferred Stock (100,000 shares, par value $100), and 100,000 ates of Common Stock, no par value. The objects to be accomplished are the stabilization of the small fruit industry of the two states by uniformity of prices and assurance of steady market; reduction of over- head expenses by centralization of management and sales; extension of market by ef- fective organization of sales effort and popularizing of trade brands; increased effici- ency by standardization of product and uniformity of pack. ; ORGANIZATION PROPERTIES The Oregon-Washington Canning & Pre- The Puyallup and Sumner Fruit Growers’ serving Company will have a directorate Canning Company’s plants at Puyallup and at of sixteen, made up of men from both Sumner, Washington, and Albany, Oregon, are states prominent in the canning industry, to be the first to be acquired, including the in finance and in business. As far as pos- new five-story concrete and steel jam plant at sible these will be distributed among the Puyallup, the home of PAUL'S JAM. Other centers of influence as related to the physi- plants will be acquired in the two states as the cal holdings of the company and the — pets mm | 2 aon The a i strategic centers of the fruit-growing tates desing of fantiitine te tees tare of . sections. The usual officers will be select- large portion of the total 1921 fruit and berry ed by the directors. crop. i if et 4a 43 os MU UO OO UT A sz-year-old boy is making $2,500 a week in the movies. Or machinery | of economics certainly has a lot of cogs out of gear. There are worse things than going to school these nice spring days, but A limited amount of both Preferred and Common stock will be set aside for public BY DR. WILLIAM E. BARTON subscription. The books will be opened at a date to be announced later. | > They still print bogks in Germany, and the books | industry and the birth and progress of the arts; then appear to be bought and read, notwithstanding the | its period of culture which and luxur high prices, Prof. Os- | ious and brittle, and then , decay and wald Spengler has tssued | doom at Munich a book on If this had been written since the war, we might the*future of civilize | suppose that had developed his theory out of his tion, The volume is | dismay that German “kultur” had gone down in bat big and expensive, but | tle. But it appears that the book was finished in has run thru six edi- | 1917, at about the time when Germany was at her tions in a whort time. | best in the fight. So, whatever the merits of the He declares that the | book, It may not be swept aside as a special plea fate which over- | developed out of Germany's defeat -whelmed the civilization Prof. Ralph Barton Paine, of Harvard, says of it: of the Orient awaits the “There {8 no major ention of the book that is nations of Europe and | proved by historical data or straight thinking. It the newer world at a| abounds in shrewd and telling comments on the nu date which he puts no erous and diverse historical events which it assem farther away than 2200 es; but as regards fundamentals its scholarship is A.D. superficial, its eriticism hasty, and {ts constructive The signs of the old | principle fanciful and obscure.” world’s decay, he main-| Civilization will last as long as it deserves to last, tains, are visible. They | and not much longer, are the growth of the| So long as we keep Its sources sweet and strong cities at the expense of | we shall be preserved by our chaste home life, the the country; the devel | integrity of our public spirit, and the stability of our opment of cosmopolitan life at the expense of the do: | commercial honor, When these fall, then as Kipling - mestic; the development of prudence at the expense | has told us, “All our pomp of yesterday ts one with of honor, and of doubt instead of religion Nineveh Tyre." These, he affirms, are the stages thru which the old The answer to the question of th world passed in the 600 years between 300 B. C. and | !Atlon Is one which we civilized p ea. py, Neither Prof. Spengler nor the anci Os certian nas iin prostate (on nine Past A But Spengler's theory is worth ata ninking about, and the dai 4 period, itr “Varzeit”; then its time of development of | against, hacae dnt lc Benak ogra) ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE FOR WASHINGTON * TACOMA SEATTLE PUYALLUP HENRY RHODES, promis vith HENRY, W. H. PAULHAMUS, President Rhodes Bros. resident Henry Investment Co. President Puy: " mans, ~ ‘uyallup and Sumner Fruf{ W. R. RUST, ‘ REGINALD H. PARSONS, Growers Canning Ca, American Smelters Securities Company President 4 nino Se dhiber Exchange Chai: bongs ved or, tT President Sei ttle Nation! ‘ ank nairman Board, National Bank of Tacoma GORDON C. CORRAL Meinrath-Corbaley Co. Oregon-Washington Canning & Preserving Company 1005 Pacific Ave. Offices Puyallup & Sumner Fruit 531 Henry Bldg. Tacgma Growers Canning Co. Elliott 4184 Puyallup Seattle TT | 2