The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 4, 1921, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1921. | ng. There ts a big B on one of Th Seattle Star iz LETTERS TOEDITOR) (THE LETTER) cn : ; fore had both those letters beget” Phorm Mata , ee BY DK. WM. FE. BARTON 1 What I saw was hundreds of tons By matt, ont oo per month; 2 mentha, $1.80 onthe, $2.78) year ” 9 | Painted on one ship in the Uniti Saks Get Hen, Ae per mean! ® pbeene Fite mening, tale) reek ee Approves Mayor’s Decision DMIRAL BER-| of con, and men, naked to the| Dente on one ship in the tnitil LB sat tn his| walet, shoveling it into furnaces like y y Pp a is 44.80 for € months, oF $9.00 per year. By earrler, tity, $06 @ month. stor The Stari Iking about, for there are milifone| Rditor Th talking , very comfortable | the mouth of Gehenna, and machin of people starving in the states and hone: 6 peed See Flags ec eneestone cabin on his flag h fo drive one frantic. Sept. 29, wherein Mayor Caldwell | wy don't a few of these kind ship, the New w Mexico is as ensy to run refused tag day for the starving | pearted souls start a drive to help Mexico, and talk-|as a Ford car. Wteutenant Cain Russians which was going to belour own starving people and got ed about his ship.| said he would show me how to run launched te Seattle. I think that| send money to other countries where 4 He & & modest |it, and I could run it easily. So far Mayor Caldwell rates @ vote of/the chances are ning out of ten man, but he|as starting and stopping, sending it lthanke, and {ff all the people’s|that the people will never see the singe ap rn nites or forward, fast or slow thoughts ran tn the same channels| money that was supposed to be no beet ship tn }d think Z learned the Oaeential PAFt! No ene wante-« sete of at the the le ‘i ith t f the mayor there would to them? the United Btates|of it in five minutes. If we had lang op, excem fe root of trouble—IGNORANCE. hat ng ogy Po poor people in ‘the ‘city ag et that Mayor Caldwell re , navy, and he ad-| been out at sea with plenty of room, se camer “< pg Ps rar of hon- 4 mits tt. I should not have hesitated to/ 7 there be a man Because ass of mankind are ignorant, we permit the rich to grow richer and [of Seattle and many other cities in| fuses every request to eoliclt funds 5 who wants ¢ <t bovaciben ik i t wi ti sn there United States, for the etarving people of foreign The New Mex |try it od he fe not worthy . Because w i of our bodies, dis- Seiten” oatede an | ial + lL estuteien Tam, foo has electric drive. Her chief} The admiral talked with modest ” nee Seem We Aly. igoorent as to: he care : think hat the founder of that say sack eg ¥.A. 8, {engineer, Lieutenant Cain, took mo| pride of a large white EB that In|, Somewhere every ease overcomes millions of us who ought still to be in the prime of life. Because (ci, jnew just exactly what he was VU. &. Navy. |own below and showed me what [| painted in two places on his ship. | i 4 Soadliicts Al have never seen before in the bow-| There ts a big Kon the funnel. | ‘fF his own encouragement his hone are not wise, we do not promptly solve the railroad and city transportation prob- A tt F; A s M ais of & great ebip. That means Excellent in Engineer. | **t penne. [That ts what the tet. Le’ (eh nce materi ies pele =~ lngrioseot * for. the unemployment problem and a dozen other questions that leave us baffled er rrom vridge ann api moa ak wy & oath wun Cel W j | y ts hunger, pickness, crime; Ah | ‘ Faltor The Star: ‘ correctly clalins to own the shortest | joe7 | Wy ts rain in winter time; Ab Wy fs Dear Sir: In looking up the news. | name the world has known,” 6o| Ah Wy te bitterness and strife tn| chicken giblet stew; Ah Wy—Ah Wy In other words, the greatest single need of the world is MORE AND BETTER | #*4* from trials, crime and boone | 1). a9 good, but let me tell, Ah Wy| many phases of our life, which peace | is Mr. Brew? for there is quite a little bit of other and friendliness should fill; Ah Wy| Ah Wy, a® problems come and g0,| wor over twent UCATION. subjects, I admit—an item struck my | !# #" en on — fa alr so calm and atill, when just «| {s everything we'd like to know? But var eagle eye, about a Chinaman, Ah] Ah Wy ts work; Ah Wy ts debti! tiny pit of breeze would how a batch | yet, whatever's in a name, ft seems Sonne epee : the average person in these United States could, by some miracle, absorb over- | Wy. Ah Wy ts dough #0 hard to get; Ah| of dainty knees? |to me that Life's a game, and if we a ds Le ; “Our fellow citizen, Ah Wy,” the] Wy is what we have to buy so awfull Ah Wy is shown, since time be.| buckle dowmand try, we never need| past Saturday's Star as much education as the average person, say, who is listed in “Who's Who,” | jem stated, “is tho guy who quite! heltobetay high: Ah Wy ts poverty! gan, man‘s tnhumanity to man: Ah to ask Ah Wy. AVRIDGE MANN. suddenly many of our problems would care for themselves, ae cnniiieeiiaiesiaammmataeninats aS SR — — _ a ‘Education is our GREAT NEED. - How stupidly, soddenly short-sighted, then, are our legislators who impose heavy ees on state university students! They are doing all possible to limit the education Toft the many. They are doing all possible to create an aristocracy of brains, co- lve with the aristocracy of money, “The university fee system must go. two first prizes. Two other ships have @ red 1; one tor Engineering, and the other for Marksmanship. They are proud even of one second and with good reason. hip of the Pacific fleet t prizen. Only prizes hard to win are worth wheeling, man should keep @ place where he can record Says the Guemes Beachcomber > “The Seattle Star is the only paper in the state which has so far been able to puncture the hide of the Hart administration and get results by way of tax reforms. It takes a sharp knife to puncture the skin of a political walrus.” Men who make a big noise make little else. Either pull for Seattle or pull out. i Ee FSPuET Greetings, “Tiny Yank” Hit ii i Be : - ull a fl Can you keep house on $25 a week? Thousands of young couples are postpon- ing marriage bécause they are afraid to try it. But it can be done! Tih ih iit BT i ged E: A Home Journal investigator tells how many couples are stretching $25 a week over rent; clothing, heat, gas, light, ice, food, fun and savings. Sern corer “How to Get Married on $25 a Week cluding labor conditions, economice, political science, sociology, history epee Sek, and Eat” is one of forty-seven (47) fea- and art.—Living Age. ey ge bite prgerss vit i if i "Whe gvarde Rie Wipe end ROE AE ihn Te tures, including an exclusive article telling R { The league hae 51 states, not ‘Geteaueens how Mrs. Wilson saved the President's * Rape beim: life, and a complete novelette, “My Aunt Poem < for . Clarinda’s Orphan,” by Corra Harris, in the 174-page October issue of inet itu HTH fe tt Hit te “lhe L A D'I'_E §°? Teacher of Helen Keller, BY LEO H. LASSEN They say the stars are patient as they keep Their stient vigil thru eternity; w—?“ A le But even stars more patient could not be % Than you a been; your way is long and steep. a To Helen you have brought the golden light : Of knowledge; and thru the wilderness To Anne Sullivan Macy, You have come with her—all tenderness— ease with love—the star within her it. tae ens zee gua en On Sale Today at Pre-War Prices The ae) without which courage can but fall; Such a trust must be a gitt of Heaven pe er mies 15c. the Copy $1.50 the Year. Try This on Your Wise Friend {From Any Newsdealer or Boy Agent: - : By Mail Subscription Pity hog fe a oe hole in four days. The first day he digs & rice as ep a ‘the co d aay " the second day You can subseribe through any fiewedealer or authorized agent or send your the first and fourth days, and the fourth day one-third 4 senes, See 38,50 aii ain ™ a || 48 many feet as he is tall. How tall is he? Answer to yesterday's: 16, m

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