The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 28, 1921, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| Seattle Star }) tba 82.18: rear, law. some time. single day. ‘times of war. ends. ‘was a kaiserite. Albers could have sung kaiser won the war. Debs OUR DAILY FICTION Once upon a time there was a ing woman. She had a great dance of rich chestnut hair, im each cheek reposed a iment. ty dimple In her mouth had a beautiful dining set, clear, pearly, glistening | She had one nose; and | eyes that violated all the | Might laws for bdrilliancy. | could sing, and she could | could climb trees and | In a bathing suit, she @ivine. One day she looked | berself in the mirror, and | that [ should meet bim again, or that we | |eonsiderabie body of mutual interesta We troduced by a man who knew us both, and _ “I don’t think I'd make good the movies.” And she vever sent her plo | two happened to be. to the contest editor. eee 000 girs dimppear in year,” cerns. headline. SUll you can see two, and then went out of each other's tives ore and more of girls on any of i Prominent streets, chanced upon & man walking up and down ridor, It was the same man. Kaiser. Ghat any more. Certainly not. ‘Ain't |Ation she had undergone. He was waiting ? her when she regained dont forget to credit Home Yt belong to the editor or the ‘or the stockholders, but to If you agree bave as much say & o BS 2F98 5 int 5 i to thi jecting ends into fish- ing on the trap, may manage 'y crippled and lamed that it e hunter. 3 & a 3 = 2. lephant herd is stampeded thru 2 with their spears. a throwers, boiling oil and exploding a ge B. G Episcopal church of Chester, has ordered the pews removed the church and rocking chairs led in their place, see But not to the city dry equad room. _A WORD FROM JOSH WISE An’ Rome didn't fall in a day, —8 cee WATSON, MY HAT AND GOGGLES, PLEASK 4. in New York Times.) ‘Work of art in negligee, on + between Madison And Lex- aves. eee > husband comptains the trouble with keeping a is that, while {t looks con ing enough on paper, it falls to out in practice, oats only. The most wonderful thing about the tree him was his hat.—8t, Paul Pioneer-Preaa, oe lew York hotels are ald to have 000 worth of whisky left over;| i that isn’t so much, when one to think about ft, vance upon his former position in buricaque. Charles evidently went on the assumption eee "TWAS EVER THUS Whe “Perfect Venus discovered in ruins of Carthage is headless. part of the discovery does not A irl who finds out that fs beautiful usually loses her Diego Tribune, * eee S*This earth,” sald a Detroit er to his congregation, “may up any day.” May! Wheredye Henry Albers is to go free. Eugene V. Debs is still in prison. Both were convicted under the espionage Debs has been in the penitentiary for Albers has not been in prison a Both were charged with talking against! the best interests of the United States in But there the similarity of their cases Albers was pro-German. Debs was simply anti-war. Debs was a conscientious objector, Albers no such thing. Debs was as much an enemy} of the kaiser and all he stood for as any| would gladly have bought the kaiser’s bonds *¥ man alive, but his mode of warfare did not|if he could. \jibe with the declared policy of this govern- The pro-kaiserite escapes punishment, UNDER THE SKIN © | BY DR. WILLIAM E. BARTON I met a man casually yeuterday, and had no thought |talking to him when I entered the place where the | I learned that this new chance acquaintance was a dealer tn automobile accessories, which ie an honor able vocation, but ons not very close to my dally con I greeted him, and we passed a remark or Today I had occasion to visit a hospital, and I Hig wife was in « was drunk when he hoched room with the door halfopen, recovering from the He's not going to do Anesthetic that had been administered for the oper We had a« little chat togetier, and | discovered many Hunting in the Cong | Sou AFRICAN newspapers print a weird story from j the Congo jungle. The white man has introduced the ++ Remember, Home Brew high-power rifle into jungle hunting. And by some mys- |terious phenomenon akin to telepathy, all big game in | Congo has learned about the deadly rifle and has lengthened will allow a man to approach be- to tear it off, but it is Another native trick is te build a hugs “bomba” or en- losure with dry brush in a high cirpular wall around it. An Revolting cruelty, you say? Agreed. But doesn’t the Congo native, at that, rank in gentleness alongside “civ-| [EMEC] 1S @—- Lan Me 244m ilized” man destroying his fellows with poison gas, flame/ | Observations Mayor Caléwell has given George Bedan, the ector, the hey te the olty. government etterncys figure thet Albers manufactured wild A man whe would poison @ dog bears human form—dul that ts all, Ifa so hard te make {ha tamigrants go to the farms because most of them have already been there—Washington Post grafting tt ts able to survive.—Columbia Record. Germany ts endoubdtedly willing te pay its debt to the allies f permitted | to name the emount of the debt.—Roanoke Times, Charles Hapeburg wont to Hungary te get hie crown, bat afl they handed An Austrion erchduke ls now in vaudeville. Well, this may be an o6- trick in @ country that was always playing the deuce.—Washington Post. “Tt seeme tmposetdle for en office-holder te save enything for « rainy day,” says 4 congressman, The same is true of umbrelia-holders—fan The end of Hetntd’s edetinacy ts near. The efies ere taking over the brewertes in occupied regiona~—-New Haven Union, You can’t expect the dove to settle down whila the riweters keep up wach) a din on new battieships.—Pucblo Star—Journal THE SEAT Henry Albers and fneaie V. Debs however, while Debs and hundreds like him are still paying the penalty of hating war more than loving their own country. ; This is no brief for for him or any of his German agents, convic all free by this time, w political prisoners are : fists remain in prison. for joy had the| could have done) things, This man wae more than a esller ef tires and spark-plues, He was an affectionate and snxiots huvband fe was a devoted father, He was @ man who cared for good music and for other good things. We talked for a few minutes, for his heart was full, and he was glad of a friendly ear. He told me many things which ordinarily he might bave kept buttoned up Inaife his vest. Now, ae I walked away from the hospital, I thenght much of this man, and how little we know about a/ Man when we judge-by what means be earns bie) dally bread, or any of the ordinary items by which we | are accustomed to describe him. Some men are worse than you think them, bet en Qn average I am disposed to believe that if we could know men as their hearts Gieclane them tn the rare Moments when they unguardedly show their real selves, we should bold them in higher honor than we da | had any were tn who was the cor to greet Now we Truly effietent if hey torwake | The business of extetane, now and then. ~ cometant teil, the steady Morety astomatene of men ie | by ui tj | | i a it il be i A i g ; ? if | : i And youth too cardes of the paming ore, ce = the way tat tne wy wing La ‘Think of the moments wasted pirhing flowers AGE Cmemne taney ene Se SE Se lion or an elephant, i becomes easy prey for e gateway. Then the| brush is set afire. The older elephants sometimes break out, play, but the younger ones can’t get thru the blazing barrier. Their feet become so badly blistered that they can’t| retreat into the jungle as the howling natives close in shells? i | of Mberty ts the amount of “Home Products” Seattle Municipal Improvement Bonds Exempt from all Federal Income Taxes Columbia State. that @ Ring could turn the that way, mister? Ain't she ai blowed up? cee T*The democratic party,” sald Bain. ige Colby, at the Jefferson din New York, “can afford to Its eight years must have fatter than anyboty supposed. eee HE MAY BE ON THE HUNT FoR % MORE EXPERIENCE ‘Lost, strayed or stolen, one large w rooster; young in years but| oa in experience. Reward for re 7 to Mrs. Mary BE. Drew.—Adver- ri tin Mt. Sterling (1li.) Demo- erat Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets If skin is yellow—complexion pall ee coated—appetite poor~ you have a bad taste in your mouth— a take live Tablets. my stitute for calomel—were red by | twenty Dr.Edwarde’OliveTabletsarea, ef vegetablecompound mixetl witholiveoil. You will know them by their olive color. Tohavea clear, pie skin, bright no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like pocket childhood days you must get at thecause. | } Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on « the liver and bowels like calomel—yet | ® fal liave no dangerous after effects. | mutual They start the bile and overcome con- | tii 12 eee a ge a be ne ot 380 pe tly ang Be that ns tt may, L. TE. Slick has| note the ing results. ions of & $300,000 law suit in Peoria, | boxes are sold annually at 15¢ and 30c, rant eee I do § OPTIMISTIC A eetyrmict uttered a cure, hankered to write lofty verne,| But the task got his goat, Bo a limerick he wrote, And remarked, “Well, it might have been worse” 4 4 Pa FAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS | ~zs.rz.ssz WE BOTH WIN } 1 am now devotin, , no-good feeling—you should |my entire time of dental practice, Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sub- | fay ae, aS ig Dr. Edwards after 17 yeas of study. | made good by tal work th guarantes. aad ee Kood. €9, | Dentists, nor do book or se! 1 EDWIN Beattie’s Lending Dentist a Primarily purchased for own account, are now offered To Net 61/2 % Denominations $200.00 Maturities 1921-1933 BOND DEPARPMENT The National City Bank of Seattle “The Bank With Twe Granite Columne* yoar not compete 7 and Sund 2 who work.” . BROWN, D. D. 106 Columbis ¥« the stress of war demanded unity of action|} and teamwork from all Americans, failed]? to see the path of duty. Yet the outstanding fact remains that The spies and the would-be spies, and the real kaiser sympathizers, escape. The in- ternment camps are empty. Only the paci- Debs bought no Liberty bonds. would he. buy German bonds. Albers, if one-half he said betrayed his real sentiment, If Albers is permitted to go free, it is a mockery of justice to keep Debs or any pacifist in the toils of the law any longer. TLE STAR THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1921. WITH RESERVATIONS Mother—Now, Teddia, wouldn't you Ike to be « banker, like Uncle Peter, when you crow up? | Teddie—Well, Mummies, couldn't I be a banker without being Ike Uncle Peter?—London Telegraph. ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine Coan) ACY « Package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, Then you will be fol lowing the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 yearn, and proved safe by mil GUARANTY BANK AND TRUST CO. 4% ON SAVINGS Debs. It is no brie | eee Se followers who, when ted of conspiracy, are hile only the so-called still in confinement. Neither ona. Take no chumps with sub- HENRY KLCINDERG Che the Boa: stitutes, Jf you see the Bayer ee TiCHeA. Crom on tablets, you ean take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatiom, Harache, Toothache, Lambago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cout few centa. Druggists also well larger packages Anpirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicytio~ President. HOMER W. KUNKER, Vice President. ARTHUR © KA Cashier. FRANK BROWN, Assistant Cashier, GEO. L. WILTON, Apsistant Cashier. GEO. V. WACHTIN, . Foreiga Dept First Ave. and Columbia 91. 25 TODAY'S QUESTION Bhoald yeung wemen be tanght te FRANK R. PIERCH, 4500 Linden ave. “Decidedly no. The odds are already tn their favor.” MISS EVELYN GREENWAY, REMARKS | Belmont apartments: “You tell ‘em, | Dempery. I'm o@ lightweight.” “Pmployere are very larrel; re| CLAUDE O8TER, 6003 Seventh sponsible for indurtrial cnres.n.. |ave. N. Bs “Yea provided they ob PURE Charis RO Ox [serve straight Marquis of Queens “twine CT teow pees ly in regard to| he LTE D ee ie clinches.” A “1am eure Lenin and Trotsky are, MISS DREDA FINLEY, 39049 Unt wuffering from decayed teeth. The|vernity way: “That depends upea | onty thing standing tn the way of | the career she has chosen.” | Bolsheviam in a country t# good) EDWARD BRITTS, 88 Cotumbta health.”-—Dr, 1B. H. Stancomb, Lon. | at: “1 don’t understand your lan. don phynician. | usage, applied to women.” Do -you know why it is the best all-round soap ? ‘There is no soap better adapted to the delicate, sen- ‘ sitive nature of the skin texture! For no soap con- tains purer or better ingredients. Though you pay five times the price, you cannot get a soap that wil] keep your complexion clearer‘bs more attractive} © Bafest of all soaps for The Complexion For Bathing Or is it your silk stockings, your delicately tinted — negligée, your crépe de chine blouse you wish to onan cleanse? Not a thread will be weakened or harmed. Camisoles, Bl There is nothing in FAIRY SOAP to injure the sheerest Lingerie texture—in fact, it is the safest of all soaps or soap Negligee , Products for fine fabrics! Your dainty garments will Kimonas wear twice as long—baby’s woolens will emerge soft, Blouses of silk, pie. = chine, georgette tno hee” Sweatérs, Scarfe Underwear, silk and woolen Baby’s Garments Men’ Silk Shirts, Socke Luncheon Sets, Dresser Scarfe, Guest Towels Pillow Tops, Draperies, Ruge Bric-a-brao Woodwork Oil Paintings Picture Frames unslrunken, sweetly clean! Everything you ask of a soap, FAIRY SOAP gives you. FAIRY SOAP floats. Its smooth, oval shape fits the hand snugly and comfortably. Through and through—it is the essence of purity. It is the whitest of soaps and it stays white. In every way, it is the best all-around soap for any ! You will find the hand-size preferable for toilet &’nd bath and the larger size best for fine laundry and around-the-house uses. You can buy FAIRY'SOAP everywhere! ORCKK FAIRBANK 22eeeEr] C/A BETTER Soap for EVERY Use

Other pages from this issue: