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7, 1922. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY OEMs or your STAR SEATTLE The Seattle Star {== e peatlie slar 82) ALetter from Start ease Mae eee oe | AVDA: MASON U.S. Policy Declared Not | a Stabilizer BY AMATEUR ECONOMIST H end United Press Servic Dear Folks In @ letter printed in The Star The r day ? went to lunch and struck a at gga February Ist, Ira Dye infors that ©) buneh; ly thing the gang could do was chew the rag about * . setrine * ‘ the flu; for every one, it seemed to had been laid up oF “ a one iB Doctrit os : fn bh DCD oO » * wilizk influence on ow rT Under a treat to go before th te reduce battleshi t sa . n ae etait hw sg~~1 : ¥ soon to go before the senate, we reduce eship armaments so us fine As local rain—I didn't have an ache or pain, an ness relations In South America hty well and free from Mls for quite & epell - oc ° abou at we cannot successfully make war on Japan in her own waters, Te en ee cee Napdin geen pia op ge oe # a ans Vtom Lyrics of Joy (Houghton, Mifflin Co.) } * ‘On the other hand it makes us safe from war on the part of Japan in our waters. a sas ‘teia opts ois han Gace OMe we have I admit, but J am un THE WINTER POOL if they formed a secret shrine, and I had lacked able to see where this policy has BY FRANK DEMPSTER SHERMAN Deep in the woods, amid the giant trees It lies alone within an open space, Heloved in summer by the-wylvan race Of God's best poete—birds and golden been; _ Diana’s mirror, full of memories Of all the nameless wonders of her face . And of the myriad jewel-rtars that grace Orion's glory and the Pleiades. butting in; the @unjersigf they seemed to try to say to, me, “If you aln't sick, you aught to bel They talfled about their many flis, their headaches, fevers, pains and chills; an@nearly everybody said it bit them hardest in the head, tll I remarked, in accents tart, “It always bite the weakest pat" Par felt an if 1° had a look at some illumined doctor book, and || told that I Mmuet take my pick from all the ways of being sick, , and joo the goandevit. eu be a piker, otherwise. Of course, it doesn't do to Jest, for I may get it like the reat; but even so, I kind of balk at all this sad and mournful talk; for J can get &, I'm afraid, without an awful lot of aid, ind that is practically where we are now. _ So all we lose is the opportunity to put ourselves in position to make war on Japan im Japanese waters. ‘This plain statement is made frankly by The Star because it is true. or plain speaking. Under what circumstances might we ever wish to carry a war to Japan in her own ‘2? Under nio circumstances conceivable except to force Japan to abandon her jalistic policy toward China and Siberia, either or both. power to do this is all we lose by the pact. it will be well for the American people to consider whether we ought to keep ever exerted any stabil fluence on business;yin fact it looks to mots if the opponite were the case. As I understand it, the Monroe Doctrine simply proclaims that the United States will not allow any nation to acquire territory on the American continent. Un doubtedly this policy on our part * bas kept some of the South American territory from coming under the control of the pean nations, It has am safety to the South Amvricans during their experiments in gov It ip a time Behold it now, all ghostly white and «tM, Shut in the shadow of the ice and snow, A solitary, mad, forsaken thing; Bereft of beauty, marred and dark until Diana comes again and looks to know Her juring emile—the loveliness of Spring: cigfaglneemenniasacienienmatgnecticenstidiasliaaataeifldinitieaamonaaie I was up all any and @ part of the Sunrhine Smiles; An income tax ernment. Kevolution has follow. or to put ourselves, in position to fight Japan for the sake of saving China 4 revolution with bewildering |Right caring for him and the ent; lank ix not so hard to fill out, if frequency. dren, and placing myself Mable to |¥% don't read the instructions, i it by not having the proper amount | Dreasmaking School, M. 4700—Aav. of rest, but neither of my children nor myself had the slightest touch of it, in fact we felt fine. If this is worth the apace It takes to print it, it may help some one hat might be placed in «@ similar porition. A CONSTANT READER OF THE STAR. In order to justify‘wur Monroe Doctrine we must belieGe that these peoples have been better off jn their turmoll with their freedom than they would have been when living under the more stable government that they | would have had if they were governed by a European power, That we do believe in thin doc- trine is borne out by the fact that we are supporting ener getically the same doctrine in Anta. If the Monrose Doctrine has not aasured a stable government in fiouth America, bas it brought ‘us the warm friendship of these Siberia or both. | Japan ought to be made to clear out of both China and Sigeria; but is it wise ‘proper for the’United States alone to look after this matter of worldwide import? Are you willing for your boys to fight the battle alone—and die—to abolish the danger to the world from Japanese encroachments on the. continent of Asia? ‘you willing to have taxes piled on taxes for generations for this? The Star does not think the American people will ever be willing to do this. We ) mot think it would be wise. We think it would be wicked and reckless and un- Letters to the Editor People Stirring in Their Sleep Rditor The Star: jhe would “go back in 1925 with 90 ‘There are 1,913 exservice men in| per cent of his fellows.” Lf any one the north district who were under |of them goes buck I will think that my personal supervision during the | the people of the atate are suffering war, The majority of them were | shell shock, or worse, overseas with the 1st division. One prominent man mays that the Many of them have written Of | people of Washington are asleep. hone of come to me this last) and."God knows what will happen month dsking about the Hanford |i they ever wake up!’ lan® promotién project which (h¢/ yt punger ie nOt exactly condu present administration is attempUng) v6 to gieep—dt ix about the ™ ‘single family in a city, however rich and powerful, does not police the city; it ‘matter for the entire community to attend to. wd ang yg bok ey oieune wakefulest thing that am,” as the] conntries? And, again, I am m pr: “ darkey told the judge, and there are| afraid that we will bave to ‘should be curbed in her mistaken and unscrupulous career; but it is a matter {tnis move on the part of the state |i oc nds of voters who are hungry) anawer in the negative. Instead of Thousands housewives have found that they cam save two-thirds of the-money usually spent for cough arations, by using this well- old recipe for making cough It is simple and cheap but it | py results. It cough and gives lly stopping an government and have written the thia winter who are thinking end article which you were kind enough | stirring ogee egy ~ aa epee Senter. | more thought furrows written acrons In my oftios, and for thelr — lthe stomachs of man than across eration, are documents, statements) 0 reads. flo let us hope, for Ww Pes Se eae ow “” the make of the state, that not one sip on a pm Or of the men who went to the state of the scheme. It ia not neceshary for me to aad, | erature in 192% will go back in because they know already, that 1/°°°" have always worked single-mindedly | Now t# the time to register, Do in and for their interests. it and vote out of office every man . ‘Thin soldier land project ts just | 08 Use Ucket this spring and next A Simple another blot on the Gov. Mart a fall whose, names were ever Wore shh ministration, ‘which Me already co |irre tna pront saninanuen| Disinfectant that another blot more or leew i Shane oampneea’ 3 48 Just another| Which is responsible for such ®/ paitor The Star: act to remember against the legis | Project as thin Hanford land prome-| lature of 1921 and yet-—a member | tion project. Yours sincerely, of that legislature told me yesterday MAUDE SWEETMAN of being grateful for the! protec- tion that we have afforded them they are inclined “to resent our protection as an unwarranted In- terference In their affairs. We have not developed sympathy, understanding or friendship in Routh America that will help us to build up @ large business. for America alone but for the world. It is a matter for a league of nations, not nation, to undertake. ‘ game of refusal to ratify is not worth the candle. That way lies terrible Unless we make ratifiable treaties now, and ratify them, we do not merely go back ‘where we were. We shall probably be headed straight for war, Senators Jones and > should see this and vote accordingly. nown syrup. has no equal for takes right hold o1 immediate relief, usi DR J. KR. BINTON Free Examination i 2% ounces of Pinex from am it into a pint bottle, an in granulated sugar syrup to make a full pint. If you prefer, use clarified molasses, '¥, OF corn « of sugar syrup. z her ry are the only one in SKATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. ination free, by graduate Sp- t. Glasses not prescribed lutely necessary. “Do you covet distinction? You will never get it by serving yourself. Do you covet honor? You will fi it only as a servant of mankind.” —W o00d- row parses unnoticed =e : This may sound rather ol¢-fash joned compared to the latest meth | ods of disinfecting, but as it proved if tt i tts ift iz pe rig Thr a fs il ti4 Eoos are still a long way from Being too cheap for one to be Caught eating them. A pretty girl of 17 never falls in love with a kindly old bachelor of 70 who isn’t rich. por waht Roe a ‘ biliousness, Ifead- aches, etc. Mthey grow older, sufter y ol j bea at little his. The cause is the poisofis produced * by chronic constipation, result- ifg in headaches, depression, bloating, sour stomach, bad ‘ breath, etc. A single bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin ‘will prove to you that you can regulate yourself 80 nation will occur promptly every day. Increased doses are not necessary, It is a com- Ffltare et well’s ‘ej os tha cashigh bo pears “a SYRUP PEPSIN IN OLD ilson. « “Be pleasant until 10 io'clock in the morning, and the rest of the day will take care of itself.” — “Anon. Lots of Seattleites wish t. so they could mortgage it a: Keep College Athletics Clean Amateur sports are the highest form of athietics, tine i 3 i i Hf ? i E ri z i ? The best plan for cleaning up college sports is to make the regulations uniform. Some schools permit ball players to play league ball during the summer, while they throw their hands up in hor- ror if a football player does the same thing. There should be no diserimina- tion. It’s up to the schools to adopt certain uniform eligibility rules, Such bodies as the Coast confer- GE and is today the largest sellin liquid laxative in the world, the formula has never been im- pi upon. It is saferand better or you bier Dp minerals, calomel, coal and such drastic purgatives. Half-Ounce Bottle Free escape constipation, 90 even if you de not fos hror dial ores "e ‘when Stenply send Sour Dr. I ‘Washingron Se Monicelio Th Wee me FUE F had a good home— buy a car. the colleges themselves. There 4 no way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death— Proverbs xjv. :18 The Chinese Strike! . Here's a plece of news that ought to stir you up! The steam- er Wenatchee has reached Hong- kong from Manila bringing 316 Filipinos to take the place of striking Chinese on the Amer jcan-owned ships Hoosier Stato and Bay Siate. These two liners belong to the shipping board, paid for out of Liberty ;bonds. They belong to you and me. Yet they sailed from SeatUe with Chinese sea men, while our own ex-service men were walking the streets, And the Chinese sailors, the cheapest labor in the world, strack! Soon President Harding will ask for a great ship subsidy from the taxpayers, It looks as if the ship-owners are following in the wake of the railroads and trying to burn the candle at both ends. “Petticoat coming back,” save an optimistic “pessimist. If it does, about tio feet of it will show. = © Hau, president of China, is pro-s nounced “that Chinese president.” Py ° “Main Street” and Marriage Editor The Star; 80, perhaps, worthy of the Compan In “Main Street” we have the/jionship of such as Will or Carol? statement of © great problem, yet| Ie hax brought Will and Carol to very ‘ered forthe true|mether, Will rejects Carol's visions net ge Ake = which he needs to refine hie own sotution ef that problem. coarseness, just as much as Carol | Had the people involved in this! rejects the coarseness which she neeis to give ballast to her spiritual flighta. If they must be blind in this particular, then there should be no conqure if the things rejected are Wil and Carol would have Known 40 very successful in our case, wil give it for the Priced disinfectants. ® pan on disinfect the rooms as well aa any. thing else. It may make you cough, but by that you will know it is Hi getting into your system. During the “flu” epidemic three years ago, we tried living in two @ kitchenette, my bus that they should not marry. But having made the mistake, of cours, the next thing is to remedy the mix take, Did they succeed in this? In & measure, yes. The relation be tween Will and Maud was in the nature of things @asentially right. and to @ greater degree the same may be maid of the relation between Cartel and Erik. The excess of the materia) In Will's nature and an equal excess of the spiritual in that of Carol divides them. However, between these extremes there is a field in which the higher part of Will's nature and the lower part of Caro! nature overlap—a field in whi they are sympathetic. They can live together quite satisfactorily so long as they are willing to confine them- selves to this restricted field. This is the field in which it is possible for them to live the domestic rela- tion of the home as friends, and to make the felation « lifelong expe rience. Thus the home in saved. ‘This is marriage. This is but half of | wedlock. The other half is mating Now, since Will and Carol are not mates, there must be some provision for satisfying to some extent the} mate hunger which sent, each of | them outside of the home for com-| panionship. Thia was right. With: out relief of this hunger the life of each is so disturbed that their do- mestic tie must be involved in the disturbance, and too often the result | in divorce With the destruction of the home. transferred to and enjoyed by oth- ers, The moral mfety of the home requires this transfer. WARNING! Say ‘‘Bayer’’ when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name ‘‘Bayer’’ on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over, 22 years and proved safe by millions for At this point, Sinclair Lewis, him- seit, seems to be under the “spell” Colds Headache Rheumatism { Main Street. He loses the cour " as axe to be just to the necessary con- Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Hi hich he has evolved. Why + Sows there not be & Mand or en Earache, Lumbago Pain, Pain Ertk who is not “impossible,” Park Laborers’ Wages Editor ‘The Star: I note with interest the decision in the cam of the city va, Jahn vn. Bressi, compelling them to pay their laborers $4.75 a day. This is a step in the right direction. However, it has come to my at-| tention that certain men working | for the Seattle park board, doing labor work, are being paid $4.60, | 4nd in some instances, $4.25, It seems to me that there should be an investigation regarding this matter. and Real Painless If contract laborers are unable to} Im onder te introd: ret along on $4.50, how can citizens | (whalebote) “plata “otten te ™X% | working for the park board? | Pghtest and strongest plate known, | Shall the above eoath? Fou men te a Se eel deficiency be | mouth; yo placed at, the door of Superintend:|eeb; gustentesd 18 senna” Of the! ent C man, or elsewhere? It appears to me this is an tnjus tlee which could easily be righted @8 Bridgewerk since there is a court decision laid 6&8 Amalgam Filling down. Respectfully, = M. SLADE, | All work guaranteed for 15 years, | ____GEOGRAPHIC PUZZLE i DECK. — CK + LAW + HARD —H flave impression t in the moras | ing and get teeth Bram ination and advice g | Cal ai See Samples of Our Pinte { end Bridge Werk. We Stand the Test ef Time Most of our present patron: recommended by our ‘eart ous om- era, whose work te still givin ood aatisfaction. Ask oer mers, who have tested oi work, When Magee gh oftics, sure are in lace. | Gis 24° with yout ae OHIO 207 UNIVERSITY er. | Vreses-Paterses Om | DELAWARE, | Accept only ‘‘Bayer’’ package which. contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablete—Alno bottles of 24 and 100— Aapirio Is the trade mark of Never Mannfactate of Monondericscttester of Rellertienct™ The firat and original Osid and Grip Tablet, the merit of which is recoge nized by ail civilized nations. Be sure you get 'BRom@d The genuine bears this signature ‘Price benefit of others not In @ position to buy the higher generous amount of hot stove twp or tliree times « Gay, and it will four years ol4, « babe 4 and myself. My hus- & case of “fu” as and live, and Ukbgrore BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVE. a Hi nh oe hn ane Fe. DRIVE OUT THE POISON ‘oley Kidney Pills help the kid- neys eliminate the poisonous waste , | and acids that ca aches and paina “ i isappoin by F. H. McGill, 149 Golden Hill St, for “2% ounces of | Bridgeport, Conn. writes: “I take full direetions and don’t | roley Kidney Pills for tumbago and guaranteed 10 | siways find great rélief.” They ban- ish backache, rheumatic pains, stiff. ness. Sold everywhere.-—Advertise- 1 dis- Nothing better for s ¢4£4¢ - Four Out of Five Wait Too Long— Are your gums tender—do they ever bleed when you brush your teeth? If so—see your dentist at once and start using Forhan’s For the Gums. You have the first symp- toms of"Pyorrhea. Incredible as it seems, four people out of every five * past the age of forty, and thousands y6unger, have Pyorrhea. Ifneglected Pyorrhea soon runs its deadly course. It loosens teeth until they drop out or must be pulled, and it causes those deadly pus potkets to which scientists now attribute eo much serious illness. If you use Forhan's For the Gums consistently, agd use it in time, you can prevent Pyorrhea or arrest its course. Brush your teeth with Forhan’s twice each day. It will keep your teeth and gums in a clean healthy condition. Don’t delay longer. Four out of five fall victims to Pyorrhea because they waited too long. 35c and 60c tubes, at your druggist’s. Formule of B. J. Forken, D. D. S. Forhan Company, New York Forhan’e, Limited, Mootras} FOR THE ¢ Checks Puorrhea OPPOR STARWA 30c. UNITY