The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 21, 1921, Page 6

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attle S th; & mo ington ODERN dairying esteems the calf somewhat lightly. A calf is mere- lya consumer of valuable milk, and the cow is the better milk producer if she does not have her mind distracted by a butting, bawling, bobbly-legged calf _ critter. So when the herdsman goes out at early morn and finds a young cow dly licking her first born; a long- black and white atom with a nose and a huge appetite, the jan removes the calf and the becomes a cow without further : — . Except for those few first 3 the cow never sees her calf , and after a few days the calf forgets that it ever derived nourish- ‘ment from anything but a tin bucket. But the mother,cow never forgets; _ in time she quits her bawling, her rest- less pacing before the pasture gate, her cing and her kicking at milking eee, but every night and morning when she is milked she stands gloom- ily for half the milking, and then she Teaches back and calmly and with in- — care licks the face and hair of milker as just once, in that won- derful night. of her motherhood, she Ticked the wabbly, butting little beast that had come to her in the silence m where all tiny baby things come. nehow, you know, that seems a bit thetic, that young cow and her itless, mournful caressing of the y face of an unshorn hired hand. But the female of the species is like it, and will be until the end. She y get her little old ballot, and she | y go to congress, she may be a law- or become head buyer for the no- ns; she may wear sensible shoes and _ SENATORS A. W. 0. L. B the senator proceeds fur er I want to record in the fact that at a time when we in an appropriat in round figures ava! appropriations) j@ are considering a bill policy cil Iie Hi | NY noon you see indoor workers, who don’t get much exercise, eating an order of meat large enough to feed four bloodhounds in an “Uncle Tom's Cabin” show. There are two kinds of foods—repair foods and fuel foods. Repair foods, called “proteins” by doctors, include meat, }eggs, etc. They rebuild body tissues that have been wasted thru exercise and muscular work. Fuel foods include bread, vegetables, sugar, butter, etc. Doctors call them “carbohydrates and fats.” They keep the machinery of the body in motion, and store up energy and| kaitor The Star. 1am sorry to have Publienea Datty by The Put leave off her corsets and go thru her | thirties intent only on her career with- | /out bothering about the man thing in | the least. And then some fine spring day this jeold, calm, superior and highly ef- ficient business person reaches around jand licks her particular calf and ev- |erybody wonders why on earth she got married. Or, maybe, she doesn’t quite reach around—maybe she only mental- ly noses her dream baby, and mentally coos to sleep a child that never will be born, but be sure she ih her secret place does bend the knee before the goddess of maternity. Are they happy, these women of ef- ficiency fighting so successfully in a man’s world, and fighting alone? Eager, afnbitious, a Bit ruthless, | loyal to the boss, industrious, reliable | always, but happy, when they reach the mellow forties and understand | once and for all that romance has jpassed them by? They are not happy, none of them, jand if you want the proof attend any convention where such women gather {and watch the expression of their faces }when they are off guard. | Then you take notice of the look on |the faces of these mothers of the land, | as you see them on the streets, on the THE SEAT > : 3} After » healthy winter an‘ spring, th’ doctors start a small Pox weare, Marriage is a partner. ship fer Ife—fer the’ life uv th’ partnership. Letters to the Editor— PROHIBITION NO MISTAKE, HE SAYS Kaitor The Star: In Saturday's tx fue @ Mr, Hunt defends the use of wine and home brew ag having the sanction of divine law, He maken the queer statement that “Christ manufactured wine.” Every Bible student knows that some parts of the Hible may be used as an excuse for almost any kind of selfish gratification, In the story of Jesus supplying the wedding feast, the writer says “They said it was wine,” and to any one who really takes the Hible ax « guide, the event hae a far different meaning, and a Much more useful jenson than that of teaching the rightnem of wine, I am sure the Master did not intend it to have Mr Hunts interpretation Diving law sanctions the things that are useful, and that lead to life, | cars, in their homes, in church, at the |theatre; worried maybe; tired, you |bet; but down deep there is a content, ja happiness, a satisfaction that comes jonly to those who somehow feel that |they have done what they could to keep \the old earth rolling. The new woman has just exactly the |Same sort of a soul the old woman had, Jonly a lot of her won’t admit it; they are not as honest as the heifer. Food Sense “i love and service, and ax Mr. Hunt} quotes Paul in favor of the stomach, | Paul teaches that it Is not what goes | into the stomach that makes life and | happiness, but the “mind” that te| within you Holy writ teaches observance and obedience to the clvil law, and no man can call himaeif 100 per cent American unless he is keeping the | lawn I, for one, do not think the prohi bition law a mistake, and there is no one about my family circle who does: I have two boys in the grades. I make the guems that when they are men the question will be larmely ent ted. and there will be but few home brew ministers Here is a little cheer-up: Bing 4 wong of nine bucks, Hip-pocket pint of rye, Four-andtwenty old soaks Shout, “Oh, my throat ts dry.” Yeu, there is a lot of noise and « lot of trouble, but I cannot believe ‘The Star wants to be on the aide of public opinion unless it knows the opinion is right, W. A. HODGING, University District. A “KNOCKING” BOOSTER ON VETS AND JAPS TLE STAR Old Timer & Berton Braley— Rabe Ruth looms larger every day And Speaker's pretty fair, And there are other stars who play With qnite a skillful air But Ggorgia’s pride still gets bis share Of piaydita from the mob, So l#t the horns and trumpets blare For Tyrus Raymond Cobb! Perhaps & search would show some gray Amidst his head of hair But no one would exactly say That Tyrus wasn't There; Still round the bases he can tear, He's right up on the job 1 don’t think, yet, we need despair Of Tyrus Raymond Cobb. 1 think he still knows how to flay The pill to regions where No fielder really likes to stray; I think he still ean scare The best of pitchers—I declare Tt makes my heartetring» throb ‘To wateh him playing—he's a beart Is Tyrus Raymond Cobb! ENVOY Pans, he's the lad can do and dare And—wateh him use his knob! Bull snappy, peppy, debonair Is Tyrus Raymond Cobb. (Copyright, 1921, by Newspaper Enterprise) leame to thin city in 1882 and lived!of the articles you have been print here for about nine years-and haveling lately are a slwaye been a good booster for Se | city, articles ridiculing the blue attle, but when I return and am |iaws and prohibition laws, calling anked for my report I will have to/the prohibition people cranka, fanat tell the truth and become @ knocker lien, longhaired men and short against you Japloving citizens Of | haired women, trying to capture part | Seattle. of the dirty money heretofore taken | Send a man down there and see|by the miloon, The prohibition peo- | how many hotels or industries of any | ple are not getting any of this dirty! kind you will find Japs working In,| money, They do not want ft, but and he will if truthful tell you not/are giving thousands of dollars of | any, or at least he could count them | good money to help fight these evilx on his fingers, and do it if be has|It would be much better for you to lont the most of them. cut out those articles that discredit | 1 will acknowledge that In the) Prohibition and help those who are fruit packing industry they have «/(rying to enforce the laws great many Chinese, but at the! same time will inform you that 4/ Chinese will not pack fruit as cheap at makes Low - . prosperous city in the sountty, te] gt Didn't the bride look stun. third in building permite and the{ ")e? : turing, and, I guess, Bn gene in? Not by giving | Dridemroo the w and then keeping | Mall [a millionaires’ club where the white | ~ man bas got to go and live on scraps When in Seattle, eat at Boldt's.— Jat a few cents per plate. | Advertisement. Enough of this, but tn your next | ~ ee tneue please ask why the Jap is civ on the preference to the ex-soldier. SPECIALTY diagrace to the F. M. BIRD. 2403 Fremont eo An4 4@idn't the look stunned?—-London | Not from an exsoldier, as 1 am) an, old man, and hot from @ union) man, but a strong believer in union: | lta, but not the kind that hires a| Jap, that refuses an exsoldier a) square meal, let = square deal | FROM A KNOCKING BOOSTER. CRITICISES ARTICLES | |ON BLUISM Editor The Star; I have been reading The Star for nearly 20 yearn. TODAY'S QUESTION In your opinion, does « soft answer turk away wrath? ANSWERS | Debi W. R. WATSON, 920 K. Pike st.:| “i cnsggg ot oo ota, aa It depends on how fast the wrath is | coming. | N. HW, CLARK, 6212 N. Es Tam still experimenting with the subject 18th ave Jenoids were probably ebiefly uible for her deafness and Tho the removal of EDWIN PICKERING, 1820 24th | the adenoids would relieve the ob Sea | struction of nasal breathing, the ea |tarrbal condition had probably be 1 mean come more or leas chromic, and hence BEN LEVY, “County-City bidg.:|™4y require considerable time for Yes, but don’t tell anybody I maid so. treatment, I should advise you te keep her under the care of the nose MIS. CORA HASLETT, 613 49th ave, 8. W.: Yeu, but don’t try it on ‘| and throat specialixt you have com husband. renp j nasal catarrh ave yea, indeed—if you know what sulted and carefully follow his im TT Fae \ LTH EATR &) Hi_ay we Wtf ‘iene hitmen SUMMER Matinee ......13c PRICES— After6 P.M...22c ADD TAX fil NOW PLAYING— OLIVE TELL. THE BRILLIANT PHOTODRAMA ts ; to my thim, but it is the truth, and/|! believe The Sta? has teen a great a I oil that ia what burte: blessing to Seattle, but I think some You need both fuel foods and repair foods. I have been in your city the paw But * ae grave danger if you don’t balance them hic dn gael sg cart ecard s fight against the Jap. i i o font to one 1 lend otels | 1 dha = — and eggs, particularly if you sit] 1 wet tO one ot oe ene, ronson | Eat plentifully of vegetables and fruit. fs nF . ———— 7 A FASCINATING STORY OF THE LOVE OF LUXURY AND THE LUXURY Very few have eyes which do not need some degree of correction. A scientifie eye test will reveal whether or not your eyes need attention. SEE OUR SPECIAL Will Preach & Sunday Morning Entitled “THE CAUSE, THE CURSE, THE CURE” part of the help consisted of Japs. | (You are asking for work for the! ex-eoidier.) 1 told the clerk I guess | 1 would try and find a hotel where | nt Price fluctuations and are in- in making wheat fluctuate than remain steady, These gamble on the bread supply of nation. ai 7 do not buy actual wheat and they do not sell actual wheat.—Rep- Fesentative Jones (D.), Texas, REMARKABLE REMARKS | Differences between the United and Japan do not justify ap ion or pessimistic forecast.— Shidehara, Japanese am- Bassador to United States. y) eee _ Jazz music works up the nervous System until 4 hysterical frenzy is Feached. It will undermine the health in no time.—Dr, George C Rubland, Milwaukee health commis. sioner. . ° I am for ideal homes rather than ideal public houses.—Lady Astor. eee No sensible man in Germany to day doubts that Germany was partly to blame for the war.—Paul Scheffer, writer for the Berlin Tageblatt. eae No country has ever gained prow Perity based on the poverty and ‘misery of the people.—Samuel Gompers. We should provide a trained citi- ‘gen reserve, organized to mect the @mergency of war.General John J. Pershing. eee Statutes are little by little en €roaching on personal liberty and soon it will be crowded out of Amer- dean life uniess a halt is called.— mor Edwards, New Jersey. eee _ The law of supply and demand > i as dead as a New England salted pe coctroner of Currency Biey They are useless para. | They do not produce wheat. | - e Speaking of Moss “The moss-grown topic of secret sessions has been raised again. The language is Senator Penrose’s. Being newspaper folks, we naturally have little sympathy with the senate habit of locking itself behind closed doors when it con- siders foreign treaties and presidential nominations. It is a moss-grown topic. And it is about time that the senate came out from under the moss. | It may yet require a Philadelphia lawyer to determine the difference between a “league” and ao “association.” The City of Happiness is in the State of Mind. The Parable of the Sunset That Followed Us There came for me an Automobile, that it might convey me unto an other City, where they desired me to speak upon an Afternoon And the daughter of the daughter of Keturah desired that she might go with me And I said, Let her go. There will be a long ride, and a long program but we shall have a good time ‘ And when her mother consented, then djl the little maiden weep. For she said, I want to go, but it is Very Far and Very Long And I said, Weep ‘not. Trus doth thy Grandmother ever when a Good Thing cometh ‘her way, and she considereth whether it will cost a Dollar that she might give to the Poor, or cause her to be absent from a Mis- sionary Meeting. And w had a Great Ride for an hundred when we arrived at the place of Assembl |the Front Seat among people d and three score furlongs. And y, then the little maiden sat on whom she had never seen befor looked up at her Grandfather as he sat upon the Platform ts0 the stood and spoke. And She was not afraid And we had a Great Ride for an hundred set out of the back window of the Car, a Sunset is following us; it is just a Mile Now on that day she had learne her certain Barns and Houses an Therefore did she know how far And she #aid, The and three score furlongs. And and she said, See, Grandpa, the Behind us d how far @ Mile tg, for I had showed 1 other things that were a Mile away. away the Sunset was, Sun Is going to sleep, but see how beautiful it ip, And it was even so, For as the Sun grew more sleepy, tt smiled as its eyelids drooped, and the West was very Beautiful with the Happy Fare well of the Sleepy Sun. And the little maiden thought she had never seen anything so wonderful And she was right; for who is so stupid as he t set and not be moved? . are ee ee So we came again unto our home as the night came on, and the-little maiden was so weary that #he could hardly open her mouth to eat her Bread and Milk betgre she went to Bed; and she scarce touched the Pillow till she was fast apleep. And I thought of the Adventures of faith that our Heavenly Father doth invite us to undertgke, and how far they seem [#0 that we weep even while we desire them. For #0 do folk at Weddings 4nd at other solemn and wonderful experiences of life. But there is a blessing that followeth all the way, and it i# never so much as a Mile Distant. WILLIAM EB. BARTON Try This on Your Wise Friend A piece of cord is 36 inches long. Divide it into two parts so that one is four-fifths the length of the other How long is each piece? Anewer to yesterday's and how perilous You have 24; your brother has 16. there were no Japs. He told me to ko and look for one, but to leave my baggage with him, and if I discov ered offers he would send my grips there, also pay for the best room in maid house as long I remained here my own room rent. I have counted over 40 cafes carrying union cards in plain sight in windows, ete. and found Japs in every-one of them working (and you want work for the returned soldier), I wax in two places which are, so 1 am told, conducted by ex-soldiers. Jap help! Now, m from California, but 1 am still at his hotel paying ere $5 Glasses Free Examination GLOBE OPTICAL CO. 1514 WESTLAKE AVE. Between Pike and Pine Sts. Great mass meeting Sun day afternoon at 3 o'clock. Rev. Dr. Chafer will dis cuss “The Prophetic High. way Concerning Satan and Evil” Sunday evening he wil! dincums “THE APPROACHING END OF THE WORLIT” Public Invited FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH | Seventh and Spring ; SEATTLE HAS 1,286 INDUSTRIES Alasks Building. home of The Seandiranan Amencan The Don't let it be said that Seatile gets op at the alarm of » Connecticut clock; washes with Cincin- nati,soap in a Pennsylvania basin; dries on a Istand towel; sits at a Grand Rapids table; potatoes cooked with Indiana lard on a St. stove burning Canadian coal. Buy SEATTLE goods, our 626 Factories make most everything cats Louis Our Only Branch Is at Ballard DEPOSITS GUARANTEED by Washington Bank Depositors’ Guaranty Fund of IK STATE OF WASHINGTON, Scandinavian American Bank Seattle, Washington na COMEDY NEWS THE GUMPS Responsibilities ESPONSIBILITIES must be taken on by everyone. As we grow older these responsibilities become heavier and more numerous. That is ope reason why it’s a good plan to save when you are young. The accumulation of funds in this way will assist you in-later years when you must shoulder extra cares and ex- penses., Start the saving habit now. Combined Resources, Dexter Horton Trust & Savings Bank and Dexter Horton National Bank $23,818,290.20 Start your savings account at the Dexter Horion Trust and Savings Bank Second Avenue at Cherry Street

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