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: Bewwaper Be-/ torpree com | | Senge my mat ort af tty. ite per mente 8 1. Oe the etele of Washington 1608 for 6 mewtnn or FE per The Seattle Sta Ovmmte of rene menthn Tet f meethn £275 ne stale, Fe per Sy acres, cay, ee 8 ee | Peenenet Deny, vy The Mar Ce ee Peeee Male wn There is no quality that the man who comes into the public eye can exhibit which more quickly wins him esteem than courage. The lack of courage often is the one shortcoming which prevents an individual from rising from mediocrity to leadership. President Harding—whatever you may think of his recommendation—displayed cour- age when he went before the senate a few days ago with his request that bonus legis- lation be delayed. Mayor Caldwell showed courage in probing the charges that reflected upon the admin- istration of police affairs. If, in face of the bold whitewashing program which the officers involved would put thru, the mayer goes to the bottom of the brutality-filth case and cleans the undesirables out of the department, the whole city will applaud his courage. The July 4th prisoners who stepped forward with the facts when they had nothing but abuse in sight for their pains, showed real courage and a sense of genuine public “spirit. Thank goodness! them. 1 i i i Q Rot be ready until 1973, and Japan | will have three tremendous vessels which will be two knots faster have, sinking floating ships at will, we have not a single airplane car- fier which we can remember. Best thing about a player piano is you can't tell when t& ts out of tune. One way to leave footprints on the sands of time ta to get out and tig. This Sounds Fine to Us To whomever it may concern in Beatie, greetings! In Newark, 0., the price of ice cream sodas bas been reduced from 15 to 10 cents, In Bridgeport, 0. the price of lee cream has been eut to 25 cents ® quart. In Batesville, Ind., a chicken din- wer may be had for 30 cents. Others please copy, Pedestrians are the ones that meed automobile tneurance. Money ts recovering tts voice. her age. Oh, for more such courage in all public walks! Congress wrote the bill to “protec' And the Standard is such a Try This on Your Wise Friend Eighteen years ago, when a couple married, the groom was three times as old as the bride. Can you tell their ages now? Answer to yesterday's: Seven apples. al | til i aE : F i if rf [; | i ‘ if i e | H - t i i E i i : : i H i i ie gF hte if ti4 Ext E . Fy Fz | bij i by i i t i fF th at} ‘ i a supported in every effort to carry the reform of this situation past the talking stage. It has been in that stage for forty years. Harding can split his infinitives & only hel make congress saw woot If clothes make the woman, many women are only half done. One Man’s Thought Albert Hayward dies in New Romney, England. Few ever heard of him. But he is said to be the man who first thought of putting tar on roads. The idea came to him while watch- ing boys making a bonfire of tar barrels in a street. The result is thousands of miles of tarred roads in Europe and in the United States. Every fact of modern civilize tion is the result of a thought in some one man's mind, Cheer up, mother. Less than three months before school starts. With short skirts, woman's over- head expense is useless Utopia; Where landlords are failed on the first of every month. Democrats fear the new tariffs will make them all ez-ports. Many borrowers scem to think they are their brother's keeper. Today he is twice The Baby Is Safe! The new tariff bill takes care of the Standard Oil Co. t” our struggling infant industries against puny little thing that congress might have over- looked it when it counted the business babies for the purpose of protecting But congress didn’t forget and didn’t overlook. No foreign pauper octopi can put cheap oil into our can or low-priced gas into our Lizzie. - John D.’s infant is safe. Of Course, Rates Will Come Down Now that the railways—100 of them—have been allowrd to reduce the wages of their employes to TH i ds I FRI HH FREE iF H § i 4 aad Me sf i i ef i tit é i [ : | of the kind word long ago. But government, generally, hasn't de veloped the buman quality. Gov- ernment, like private business, functions best when it works in a friendty, co-operative spirit rather than as the haughty master. Will Hays is setting » good example. Pay for wor and pray for peace. of Fame for Great Americans” is situated in New York city, Sixty-two names are inscribed in it. Among them are John A. Audo- bon, Gilbert Stuart, Louis Agassiz, Mary Lyon, Maria Mitchell, Joseph Story and Elias Howe, Do YOU know who each of them was? Such is FAME! Experiment Station ods in fighting weeds. “Brief. Culling Instructions,” Puyallup, Wash. A BULLETIN FOR THE FARMERS Much valuable information for the Western Washington rancher is contained in the July bulletin of the Western Washington For instance, there is an article on how to avoid or lemen injury by freezing to berry bushes. Another article tells of effective meth- “Practical Methods of Watering Layers,” “Prolap “Midsummer Feeding Problems” and “Notes of Pig Feeding” are some of the other interesting articles, These bulletins may be had free for the asking. one, mail the attached coupon to the station. Western Washington Experiment Station, 1 would like to have a copy of your July bullctin. THE [LETTERS TO EDITOR The Treatment the Stadium © It makes me feel ashamed af my country Rifle and Brick Wall titer The Star ‘One Whe Lost Your correspond stales my case oaT ces | I taught my son to bank his mon How jong, oh, Lord, how long are and often when he wished to the pec be exploited by these yond it showed him the error of his hightooed crooks? | reasoning. Our courts are & farce and the And so I can my, Uke “One Whe jude ten Laat to me and ms Tr? Wh ing dut the boy shall and he came will I lose my money 4 1 my? thank Ged, I can do, | Sweet land of free America. to sing thy praise «to ne new anthems still | 4 have Gone } tor the right. Brought mi |Loré Ged of Truth in whom we| Moms to our shore, trust, For Justice and Humanity Eéiter The Star: Allow me to ex lorens my appreciation of your atti | tude toward the jail situation in Se attic. It is a pleasure to wubscribe to a/ paper which fearlessly comes out on | Another Episode With Po | Editor The Star: I would much | prefer that you Go not use my name, | but I, too. have had an experience 1 | with the police. | Last May I happened to be on | King st one evening, and, noticing « | People will converse, laugh. smile and probably eat, drink and sleep ia | |beaven much as they do on earth.—/ |The Tey. C. McKay Smock, Phiadel | | phia clergyman. eee Every prize fighter I ever exam | [sina avers oe None | of them are really strong men.—Dr. Woods Hutchinson, Boston physician SOMEBODY'S ALWAYS PICKING! j ON MITCH 1 | Mr. Speaker, until about a year} jago I regarded Mr. Burleson as the lgreatest asset of the republican | party. Since that time and until he | wemt out of office last March I have |been forced to substitute the name jot A Mitchel Palmer as the great let asset of the republican party |The story sugar, the story of |coal, the story of the allen property | disposition, wherever they are under. stood, mean that the party of which }, Mr. Palmer t« @ prominent spokes man suffers, and suffers justly, in the public esteem. —Representative | Rogers (R), Mars. * A SENATOR ON ROADS Mr. President, I am fond of the |democracy of the open road. It is lone of the few places where thel pauper is equal to the prince; one! jof the few places where title, wealth, | | social position, color, race, previous | jeondition of servitude make no dif-| |ference between man and man, wom. | jan and woman. The only piece of | | Walt Whitman's poetry that I ever |understood wag his “Open Road.”| | We call them big roads down in the} j | | |South. We love them. Along these roads every man travels on a foot ing of absolute equality. He camps |by the side of them at night if he | wants to; he takes his meal of vic | tuals from his barket or his lunch | paper if he wants to. He is as much} at home there as if he owned it, =| | cause he, as much as anybody else, does own it. The place which he} |then and there occupies ie his, and jit is his until he passes on and sur-| render» it to one who comes after him. Senator Watson (D), Ga. or S0-Called Blowouts,” if you want SEATTLE STAR in euch a and alo ]10.080 plurality The Star te daily/ paign for better treatment of prison j ' | THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1921 France, U. S. Salutes You! BY DR WILLIAM & BARTON EN ye ae ce) | C iu } Ook ays | “COURAGE BY DOUGLAS MALLOCH ‘ urage is Not ja To bare @ne's bosom to the saber thrust, Alone in daring give Courage s to grieve when we possibly can rid believe MRS WM HOARE Kenn W aot has robted him of What we neet today ts the rifle and brick wall for t of crooks I thank you. July Clean-Up Women’s Apparel Dainty Evening Dresses as low as $15.00 Golfing Coats, made to stand herd wea . $5.95 Do your Christmas shopping now by buying beautiful silk underthings at about one-half the price that will be asked in December. Great Roler of the free. eur bomes, our land, eur), Protect Theu art cur King Beto Thy struggle in 2 we obtained ree, Remove in} + from ocr land ‘And reige etermally ht by Jan G Chamog | tue Wash) | of governing ourselves. | Thou art a republic. O France.} }and honorest thy Lafayette as we jhomer Washington. Well mayest | thou do so, and we rise this day and the side of justice and humanity. honor him with thee. | This is one of the reasons why Sat But this remember well, O France {¢ that for which Lafayette fought paper.”|and Washington fought and Crom fought had been as easy us the down of prison walls or the i Off the beads of kings or the j ng of declarations of indepen- | | dence, the history of the last bun-!/ |dred years, yea of the last 10 years, | he had been very different. } not! Lafayette, we are here Chast-| i who bad/ened and sobered by the very events | made rrest brutally strike one|l which jointly we have wrought. of the offenders in the face several|believing im all that we ever mes. have believed of Uberty under law, I remarked to another observer | joined anew in recent and triumph 4&5 outrage I considered it, onty | ant struggle against tyranny where to learn be, too, was an officer, and|in the bicod of our sons mingled for my remark I was given « ride in| With that of yours, we peeat our: | the wagon when it came, and|*tives now to the duty charged with being drunk which the established rule of the) patie ‘i people involves. We will seek to ee Ce acedtee = the world know that we can| which I was beaten up unmercifully, | "tty Severe oursetves. ] ” 7. Filing out the Tricolor this day, 0; and after spending a night of horror Fra: and America will salute it! I was fined $16, which I was glad to! yp ‘on | th solemn dignity and affection. pay to get away before I was mur joy. wherein are mingled some | — sobering reflections. — Lafayette (Coprr elected Seattie’s Sincerely, favorite JULIA MARSH, Arlington, Wash. | Po! Aa I am « traveling man. I could | 1p. God, we still are be: not afford to make an outcry, for |< Oot ¥* fear my house would hear of it and it would causn toe to lose my pou || S120—CHOICE ROOWS—s1ee altho I have not taken a drink dong oils a ete cnce! = ‘You err | SECOND & UNION SEATTLE WKH j Wishing you success in your cam | ers, I am, yours, GMs x /\WE HAVEN y /NEVER PAID LESS\ {THAN YY PER ANNUM we Lost time can mever be re- placed. Take Time By The Forelock— start Saving NOW— and all opportunity is yours.» OFFICER: A. FLANDERSON PResipent President Ducovery Bay Nitoral Cay Bark, ADOLPH F. LINDEN VICE PRES. - TREASURER CW. CAMPEELL VICE PRES. SECRETARY CORWIN S. SHANK COVRSEL Puget Sound’ Savings and “Loan Association Where Pike Crosses Third ay \