The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 6, 1922, Page 6

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I portanadininabenpameet oe aaa RSET THE SE ATL FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1922 = eg AWWRIDGE MANN |e Glison Marshall an ©V72i by Little Brown & Co and. MEA Bervice Nj that in the a white man's country big question which must be settled at ones, Very truly yours MILLER FREEMAN 71 Columbia St quentio ing thin That in the To Senator Miles Poindexter Miles--L guens you're peeing from the Kd, who writes his daily little note Kht to vote; which is, Newberry Now don't you let it tarn your b - red at what You're getting u This Is Your Duty The books opened Tuesday at the kick T he maye without a doubt, to This is an old story. It's about registration. out to get these letters from 5 | : i i ¢ ty-city building. More than the Bd; he's really quite a decent bloke, but has to have his litte |) ’ | : OW AONE tanker: Far Worth’ precgéciel, Wek Gaal Peete tion ater ie tne city cee eee von. This total abguid be rained || 2%, 20 having nothing lve too, he thought he'd try to Bk |A New Year’s Sat catikcar dtvotaakecwee’ sete. iee ek tee aed eee “ ‘ " the last city election. is total si on you | * s the Clearwater, Ad & Child iN wowed he wenad fink hedheta «@ 100,000 voters were registered before gg ee IES 1a SR a ae Resolution mi the Clearwa A hild Bill 1 he would find Kuthefora Hill iv hired fo guide a party looking for HAROLD LOUNSBURY, lost tix years before in the Clearwater, searchers are VIRGINIA for we of the Pacific Coast, like Pharisees, can proudly boast that when we all elected you we never got a single sou And so, you see, our skirts are cloar—there ten't rank corrup tion here~and if a bloated miilionairg can buy himself a senate chair, where senate seaty are up for sale, why should we worry and grow pale? Of course, a lot of folks, I guess, will my we ought to clean the mess, and patriotically moan, “the senate’s honor in our || own"; but don't you let these verbal bricks knock out the negds ‘of politics! So oust your vole am you think best; protect yournelf—and damn the rest. In polities the race is run by looking out for No, 1, Lord knows, we've got a lot of rot-—why fuss about another blot? Editor The Star: In reading the letters to the news papers, do the people in Seattle note that the majority of them are ex-| posures of something wrong in some | of our clty.owned concerns? I have a plan to submit to the citi rons of Beattie that if carried out will be of greater value in advertin |ing Seattio as she really is to our | neighbors, whone information ts ob- tained to the greatest per cent thru |the prem of this city, by many thousands. 4 If you are an American citizen, you ought to register. If you do not register, you cannot vote. All previous registrations were canceled TREMONT, Launebury’s fiancee KENLY LOUNBBURY, the miaing better man, haw been forced to hire VORPER, weak and viciour, juxury all her life, falls into Ub emilingly, but Kenly, the une and— man's uncle. Bill, unable te Virginia, altho accustomed rit of the trail and bears the hardal quarrels from the start He refuse consider Bills stggention that he himself suitable clothes and quarrels over the y of the horses provided Now go on with the story Her first impression of the wilder nese was that of a far-wtretching 4 | I would tke to be one of those lett, forgotten and desolate and un-| the n | citixena of Beattie who, really believ.| peopled as the flery stars. Likewine Jing that this city t# the greatest city | this was Lounsbury’s view, ax in the | mal called the grizzly bear?” lon the went const, with prospects of ease of every tenderfoot who h 004 Heavens! A bear cou | being armonent of the| preceded him, but Lounsbury would| reach that high—" commercial will write a let. | likely grow old and perish without Couldn't? Some-of these bi as cook ty treasurer and city comptroller. Well, it’s strictly up to you. 4 _ If you fail to register you will be slacking your public duty. Don’t be a slacker. 4 ‘The Seattle Star would be willing " see some sort of law enacted to take citizenship os ty from people who habitually are too busy or too tired or too slothful to register to vote. People who do not think enough of their city, their country, to use the hat is it?” she inquired hat's the sign that the lor anor has been along, Mins , did you ever hear of an the leaders world, ter answering every letter published | discovering his mistake, Clear eyes| could scoop the man out of claim to it. that finds fault with anything in Se |are needed to remd the secrets of the | moon!* ? bave:ne ¥ ill attle; stating the virtues only, not| wild: the dark glass thru which be| je showed her gray, crink Remember, every man with an ax to grind will be registered and his ballot w trying to covér up the faults, but| «axed at the world had never cleared.| airy that had caught yo Gan 4 leaving that part to thone who feel it their duty to expose. If there in in this city anything that we can’t find good to write about In answer to an “expone” let ter, let's throw it out, I don’t advo }eate a suppression of facts, but are we fair in stating only the faults Tuke the port of Seattle, for in |stance. Tell me the name of any |man or woman who owned a dol jlar’e worth of stock Vonper had lived months and years | explaining Ahat mysterious wi: in the North, but he had only hatred | ness custom of the grisly of 1 jin his heart for these waste places! uring hi» length on the tree trd Jand thus Received no «glory from] and leaving a mark, as high a |them. But Virginia soon found out|can bite, for all to see, Acco: the truth, }to many naturalists any bear “There's an old bull been along) cannot bite an equal height in here not twenty minutes ago,” Bill diately seeks a new range, lea ltold her after they reached the hill-|the district to the larger bear. top. “The mud hasn't begun to dry | Bur confensed that he took the le; jin his tracks.” | with @ grain of walt, “I've seen | “An old bull?” she repeated. many bear families running a | ™ hare~ ‘ who would take as little interest in | {tie run here the woods together,” he expiai ye cast. If you want a decent, progressive, intelligent government for this city, do not put your registration. Sign your name to the book right away, That's your duty Should Reorganization Wait? Editor The Star: Murphine, be asked for a written ‘The reorganisation of the port com-| opinion as to whether the reorgan} minsion ix regularly scheduled for the | gation should take place on the seo second Monday in January, BUT—/| ond Monday in Januaty or after the At Wednesday's meeting the ques-/new commission is organized in tien was raised whether this waa | June. expedient owing to the fact that in| it may be for the best Interests May comes another election, lof the politicians to postpone the Dr. Christensen, president of the| reorganization, but is it conducive Bosses with mustaches should never kiss sten- ographers until they put their gum away. ‘Do in a concern $ Fe) pproriccs nnerchant eainine | what the answer seems to come ‘The unelens loaa of this poticy | ization, Mr. Sammori mid ‘ This institution, with tts conservative directors ae to: fs the hard feeging it will bring “Ordinarily, a hybrid ts looked : iwmcters A subsidy should be granted | the United Staten from other na- |down on as inferior, but it ls due and its safe investment policy, has helped to pre- sie ta equal to the amount that our tions, If we discriminate in | more to the society than the inter i “I have thought for some time | ships will nave by the preferen- charging tolls, all the world will | marriage. Often woclety does not pare thrifty people for the great opportunity. pea ory cae eaaennaicomsesicasoama | phoned ; = comminsion, raised the question and | to good business? | oe A “Good Lord, there tm't a cow this |“Pa bears, ma bears, and baby ‘1 tect hie Bet the man who has worn the same overcoat 35 | moved that the port counsel, Mr. | MAUDE SWEETMAN, [rie ae te thele prt, Cats (Of a side of the shipping point. I mean| al aitferent alzes.” ' ears never eats in restaurants, Met ata . Seattle's future success aor te eee niunker.| Virgina noticed that he spoke During the {6 nh lutio . too, Maybe we'll catch a glimpse of | great respect for that huge fo thas oe i other Japanese n 1'd be willing to wager that not | him.” king, the grizzly; but she we 6 Somebody ought to get up an exercise for Te- | paior The star: thereon all the Japanese who ean| one in 100 in Seattle has ever visited | In her time ahe had talked enough | have wondered, The grest creel ' . Jution| make a claim to citizenship, making| thelr property, and all they know|to biggame hunters to have consid-|was worthy of it. rushed to the bes ducing fat-heads. Tam going to suggest ® solution) ii", bargain that they do not return] @bout it ts that “it 1 @ political or-|erable respect for the moose, the| Perhaps the most intelligent father still alive. —_ - anal for the United States of the ud fi the United States, and prohibit] nization.” largest of all deer tribe, and she! enimal that roams the American is rejoicing. But There isn’t any safety in auto numbers. anese quelition: Jal! immfgration from Japan to the| For this club I would suggeat: thrilled a little at the thought that! tinent—on the same intelled much grief and — Let the kovernment ret aside an) United States or to the inland No meeting place except thru the | #b¢ was in bis own range. She didn’t | plane with the dog and elep father really had The egg is easier to get than the nogg. island in the Pacific, and place| MRS. .N. | columns of our jocal papers. [et sight of the great creature, but|ne was also the most terrible, gq fry to aspire to a scat in Kenyon (R) I Poindexter’s Opinions on _ Ship Subsidy BY AMATEUR ECONOMIST ‘The following is Senator Poin- Gexter’s answer to the question, “Will we have to subsidize the that the proper use of our nat- ural and acquired advantages in behalf of our own ships as pre- A Problem in Arithmetic (rom Voters’ Information Bulletin) As there are 7000 city and county employes who like to spend your money, If each one of these 7,000 de- liver four votes at each election, cundey.*\ tuk perhaps in the 2 i showed her a great tear in the bark | and c0ld as low a0 8 cout a feet, The | uitimate solution of the Pacific ques-|“mpalen to obtain a formal recog | —_— of « tree, nearly, as bigh as she ¢ > nition of race equality by overcom | 708 22nd Ave. could reach 6 berestadk. If only 50 per cent. of the ether price ranges up to 10 cents a foot | tion si ‘ registered voters vote Getting Old- Fashioned Fast ups realizé that we'll have double our step to keep pace with the world. Some nursery movie films The ONE Real Jap Problem (Copy) are thoroly Americanized we can not mee the objection, but if this takes ag cee as mnie, place before we should endeaver to Pane bend Nice refrain from them.” You have doubtieas obsgrved that separate cover Pag yo inge Bevrwrg te containing |conaiderable publicity has been given an interview by Viscount Shibusawa in which he makes “the statement that “there is no reason why Japan lene and Americans should not inter | nent Japanese attending the disarma. ment conference had white wiver ‘Thin statement is undoubtedly char facts of @ bopnting suppor The prewence of these particular Jap. | junt anese was manifertiy part of their) Yeas wish of That you seed your name and ad- dress to the newspaper. ‘That you are careful to write only nature That no letter of a knocking na- ture go unchallenged. ‘That the motto be “ROOST.” That the subject be “TO TELL |the fact that neveral of the proms. |THE WORLD.” That the clubs of Seattle unite in a thig movement, showing where they stand, im the New jehe began to pay more attention to/truth has been almost estabil the trail. Seeing her Interest, the among big-eame hunters that | eulde began to read to her the mes-| animals, with few exceptions, [mage in the tracks—-how here a pair) when wounded practically of otters had raced along in the) charge or attack the hunter, dawn, stopping at intervals to slide; | nig imperial majesty, the grizzly, how a cow earibou and calf had pre | ceded them at midday; how a coyote (Turn to Page 13, Column Ihad come skulking the previous! night. Beside a marsh he showed ther the grim evidence of a wilder | | ness tragedy —the skeleton and feath. | ers of n Koone that a stalking wolf! |had taken by surprise. And once he | Men's Two-Pant Sui! acteristic of Japanese eentiment. If CHM OE TE SUAS HARARA BS ON OPA ge ar attire New, when = question of raking crpiede raoypemm yg Bey om cepert of the im sssesee ro senseneccceses i pt ad ’ seed De yeu remember the first | vertigation of the Japanese question : wins? fe : conducted in California, Oregon and ‘ THE ANSWER THIS — it thrilled | Washington by the houre committee : rae TS yout The sclentifie marvel of | on jnmisration during the summer IN YOUR HIGH TAX STATE- MENT. * If it keeps on, we'll be getting led wr jorab—Register and Vote! teatified den! the proprict: zr M eld-tashiened every 24 beurs. mixed marriages, Congressman Raker of California, a member of the Mr. Roosevelt recommended on eppropriation to send food down to Jamaica and Martinique; and the wery first native who came up to the gangplank after the ships an- chored in Martinique offered to seit American sailors some food.—Sen young men find a teal opportu. nity in operating, owning and building ships, they will find a way to solve whatever problems are connected with it.” WE LIKE TO “KID” OURSELVES Amateur Economist asked Sen- ator Poindexter the question hoping to get an idea as to what is going to be done about our merchant marine. This iq about tial tariff plus the tolls not col. lected from our ships at Panama, corm—a whole carload of cora— from Verona, Ned. to Billings, Mont., where they had no corn, and he did not get enough for his country would understand the question of subsidy if it was clearly put to them, bet it will not be put to them in this man ner; instead, the real issue will be hidden by @ amoke screen, A subsidy will be called a “preferential tariff.” The more complex and hidden the work. ings of our government are, the harder to bring home responsi- bulity. resent it; but if we collect the tolis and then hand them back as of 1920, you will mmte that not a single Japanese of the many who committee, wan particularly dfigent in asking the Japanese witnesnes to state their views on the mubject of intermarriage of the two races and | with startling unanimity, their an. swers were in substance almost identical with that of Viscount Shi added you come back, you will wee thin warm Japanese blood mixed up with your race.” Mr. Saxamori, secretary of the Jap- anese Association of Southern Call. fornia, said: “I think intermarriage good, but it should come up ax social asnimilation. Soctal assimilation would have to come first, and then that racial assimilation be followed.” FF In a written statement setting forth | authentically the views of his organ his banker. sanction a union of different races and look upon them with an eye of When the Great _9 portunity Gomes Watson (D) Ga. . carload of corn to pay the pecight, |busawa. George Shima, commonty a) He was in debt to the railroad | known aa the “potato king” of Call h ae Mtatistics show a shortage of 15- Lats of movie stars who pet thou- company 5! cents when he got thru | fornia, said he eek tetermas T SOME TIME or other in everyone’s life there Plumbers, but they may just sands a week only work one week with the operation—Sen. Norris | tage “a very & hing. lor " A late. @ year, (R) Neb. mentioning that of 2,000 Japanese comes a great opportunity to make a wise and living in New York, ten per cent ‘ , were married to American girls, he profitable investment—will you be ready ping. Once our enterprising fashion. Every citizen in thin “In a hundred years when The person who has saved systematically ts not only ready when the time comes, but has the added advantage of the advice and guidance of And all the ume his money is in this savings society it 1s increasing itself. May we help you, too? also plus certain profits from mw subsidy, nobody would have j|contempt, and thus the evil effect Wail ferred to other nations would en- mail contracts. 4 } . ~ Vil is ‘ any ground to object upon the offspring. For these re. : fife we to bulld up an American All muccesatul business at the We Americans seem to get a | sons it is no ground to oppone inter. Savings left with us on or before January L4th | AS ae nests Present time in making @ great | lot of satintaction out of “kid | marriage. We firmly believe that : tds . effort to keep exact costs, making | ding” ourselves. But how much | we can obtain a better race by inter. will draw dividends from the first. \ he Panam canal was con- each part of their bustness easily better it would be to face an | mingling bloods of different races structed solely with American money and the territorial and other rights necessary to its construction were acquired by the American government and people. If American ships were given the benefit of this water. Way without tolls it would, of course, give them a great ad- Vantage over other ships. “If the exclusive privileges en- Joyed by our conat-wise ships ‘were granted to American ships operating between the U. S. and its outlying porsessions it would #ive added impetus to the build- ing up of an American marine. SHOULD INTEREST YOUNG MEN “At two sessions of congrens and under two administrations a law has been passed and ap. Proved providing preferential du: ties in favor of goods imported in American ships. Unfortu. Nately this law has not been en- forced as steps have not been taken to secure a modifieation of treaties with foreign coun- tries said to be necessary in or- der to give these preferential du- ties to American ships. “I am inclined to think that if these concessions were made to American ships it would go a long way towards encouraging American ship owning and oper- ating, and its accompanying in dustry of American ship build ing, without payment of sub sidies. “American ships should be pre- ferred in American mail, con. BEST $2.50 GLASSES tracts. The navigation laws wa 74 al ¥ should be carefully examined ! on Earth on a view to discovering ONT? w whethe ” D1 ot \ Ve are one of th © oO ie ip cine ar’ atte ts foe eee & SORES 5S stores in jae, Northw cote A rae 4 on amendments é Smee grind lenses from start to finish, and p which can be adopted without in v " i juring the status of American seamen “What we need most of all in to arouse a real and genuine in terest among the young men of this country in American ship. understood. The business of the U, 8. is carried on after another issue squarely and call an ace an ace and a spade a spad Of tuneful voices? For his soul's pi BY FRANCES LAUGHTON MACE As one by one the singers of our land, Summoned away by Death's unfailing dart, Unto the greater mystery depart, Sadly we watch them from the desolate strand. Ob! Who shall fill their places in the band Who with equal art Speak the unwritten language of the heart, And the mute signs of Nature understand? Yet poetry from earth has never ceased: It is a fire perpetual, which has caught ’ Its flame from off the altar-place of Heaven. Never has failed, in darkest hours, a priest Who, by no price of gain or glory bought, his lif to wong has given. GEOGRAPHIC PUZZLE VERTE re ANiwer | | PAGE +M—GEM + Risk — K= PARIS of this are abundant in the [ | ¥ of the human race, But such an intermarriage must be the res of the natural course of the thing and not by the artificial stimull of the man. Thus we believe the inter marriage between Japanese and Americans is the result of natura! course after the Japanese are as similated psychologically and socially or, in other words, if such intermar riage take place after the Japanese to offer our many customers DR 4 KR. BINYON | Free Examination we are the only o SEATTLIE—ON VIRST AVE, Examination free, vy graduate op: |tometrist. Glasses not preseribed [unless absolutely necessary BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 WEST AVE. Between Spring and Scucea -AZAnderson, Pres. Yo The many appointments prowded 'm our new quarters include the Ladies Writing Room and Rest Room—convernences we are glad PUGET S Where Prke KN i Ai During the past twenty-one years we have never paid our members less than Ser /in Dividends Adolph F Liden.,¥P-Irpas, OUND SAVINGS Street Grosses Third a aia EW. Campbell,vP-Svy. Corwih SShank, Course? IN

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