The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 3, 1922, Page 6

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’ salaries, i te Hy Fr 28 ; z m i i i = rad i & i Hi : i i i iy “i 4 2 it tf i i I piEE ETE BFR if j i I f | I bi f f i i i z Fy z F i 1 if if i | } 1} iif tt il : i i | if HL HY i ; i HP ‘f H i it il ; | by The @t Pubtiening Oo, Prove Main FTE, pean, eee per mania, @ month Leave Teachers’ Salaries Alone | | A few individuals, even a few orguntyations in Seattle, are talking about cutting Star’s advice to these people is: FORGET IT. Do something useful. | rs in Seattle are even now being paid only moderate salaries. True, the level raised considerably during the war, but it ought to have been raised long before | ° war. Our teachers for years were criminally underpaid; the war-time increases id not bring their salaries a cent higher than they ought to stand permanently. there is any candidate for school board who cherishes an idea, or is willing to put & platform, of; cutting teachers’ salaries he owes it to the public to say so now in | ci terms. In fact, before The Star will endorse any candidate for the school | in any degree we will have to be assured in definite terms that he stands for no 1 step along this line. The Star hopes, so that the question may be promptly to rest, that all the candidates take such a position. kissed co-ed. Everybody is interested when a college unearths another “unkissed senior” every now and then, but there never seems to be much demand to see an un- Optimist: A bird on the hat is worth 10 on the dollar. Sick man learning to play a harp. Pessimist: Sick man learning to shovel coal. No movie is as bad as the name it is given. pletely daffy, the manufacturers will not get what they want. Until a process is found where by Americans can produce potash ab prices at least comparable with wortd prices—at a cost which will not be ruinous to farming com- munities—their appeal to congress to shut out foreign potash is the very easence of greed. What is more dreadful than tr- reverent art, which paints ali that it sees, Decaure it sees almost noth- ing, and yet does not dream that there is more to see; which mmg- pests nothing because i mexpects nothing profounder than the flimey in man, nor secret in nature, nor dignity in life?—Philips Brooke Every time you fina « man whe has cver worn the wniform of an officer as high as colonel, you find SRE He t i H i ~ f t i i 3 z Fgh Ht ; i ; This Bretes buticr whe thought he was the whole cheese turned out to be only a small part of it He who obeys with modesty ap- pears worthy of some day or other being allowed to command.— Cicero Cicero. A man whe growls at everything leads a dog's life. ORUIEAG) Made Write or call for catalog WHERE. E : 4 4098 Arcade Bldg. the type of house you want. our architects can adapt your | house you select from our catalog. Materials, and you can have the house erected, or we will contract to bulid it for you. American Homes Inc. 1 you the in Seattie. and estimates WE SHIP ANY- IDLE You will have no idle with this association are compounded. LAZY should, if placed with the benefit of their FT $1 to $5,000 accepted eight-hour shifts daily they are you, and as reward every #ix Dollars that are only earning you half what they before the Sth of the month earns from the 1st. DOLLARS dollars if They are have an account ways buay—three 1 Job earning for onths the e DOLLARS this association will give you Li, earning power and all money recetved on or LOAN 950 93:324 AVE Mm m Nn SEATTLE SAVINGS and ASSOCIATION When Max Meets Johndee Max Oser—engaged Mathilde McCormick, granddaugh- Kockefeller—has sold his riding academy and tiv. ery stable in Switzerland. ter of John D. Max, it's reported, America in April, to be presented | Seattlen, greetings. The reat century there hasn't fortification along Canadian-Anwriean Dear Fotks; other folks, but Pubtiened Datty ttle Star | toms ef daily life. No city realizes this fact more keenly than docs | We are now celvbrating Cana dian Week, to promote better mu- Across the border, the twe | neighbors exchange burdened with misunderstanding and armaments, most envy us as they ponder that for more than a THE And nh 1 Her h Years have there been when I could bear the beauty Of budding trees and flashing wings; Now I am one with trodden leaves of Autumn And all old broken things. | Editor The Star: —- | of attending Harry A. Fra sohool teachers’ league After having read Mr, latest book on Spanish A had become thoroly convin marry bn as a historian of South ever vinited our fair city, frained from saying anythin: will arrive tm | aoea in his book, he misre | that Bouth America today as primitive a stage as hand of civiliaation has His pietures of the people doubt convince me that he tod carrying a baby on her so far as he knew there baby carriages in all South foun trade? What do thoes Piiter The Star: these articles, names, are not Jews | To the Jewten observer cussions seem to strike his sense of humor, They remind hire apend it. or the Irish back to Irelan I am eure, now that I free, not many Irt the New York across the sea for which the fought. Also T am at why theae gentlemen are to by | whe Irish bave Id like to ank these tea happened to them that on solitary of the wortd, |formke Christianity and « Jewish religion? other fellow’s religion and » and Portraite (Doubleday, A Song in Springtime BY DON MARQUIS Inexorable pring comes on to hunt me, With all her aching ecstacy, uty Uke « javelin the heart of ma She spares me nothing, nothing of her laugh Her golden whim of daffodils, Her calling and her «inging down the valleya, Her song among the hills, Nothing she spares me, nothing of her rapture, ping brooks, her young things growing, Her seagulle plunging thru the tides of eun Out of the daywpring Mowing. LETTERS 2 EDITOR In Defense of South America Friday night I had the opportunity nek'® joo | ture under the aumploss of the high | Pranck’s merica 1 need that American travels ho is the biggest fraud that Altho tn last night's lecture he re 6 against the LatipAmerican people, as be} preaentod the facts by leading one to believe fe still in pen the Spaniards discovered it, and that the not yet) reached that part of the world. from the Andean region of South America are! to be found in many stores on the West coast of Latin America and I very much whether he can ok them. After showing a picture of a woman | back, he made the ridiculous statement that were no America. Why worry about our Latin. Amer poor and ignerant Indians know about wear ing American shor, cooking In « stove or riding in aa automediie? Mut the facts are that South Vaue & Oo) | | America bas imported nearty $2,000,- 000,000 worth of goods @ year, and they include every sort of luxury not even found in some of our Amer- joan cltion South Amertean cities today, with the exception of & few isolated coun tries, can bear campariaon with any |of our most up-to-date cities. | It ts anelees for me to try to tell |here anything concerning the life, mode of living and culture of the! Latin-American people, as many) well-known and unbiased American writers have already written volumes on the subject and the columns of jour dafly papers and monthly re views have been full of Information | concerning the people and the coun: | tries of Bouth America. | necensary for « Jew t |phationly states And I would advise all the well meaning, fairminded American peo | ple, when looking for knowledm on anything concerning the Spanish countries to go to the public library, | where one can find reliable informa. tion given out by the Pan-American |Union at Washington, D, C You need not go to hear @ so-called vagabond, whe tells you all sorts of bunk (to borrow a pure Americaniam) about things be pever saw and which may prove to be the biggest ae over perpetrated. ROBERT ALLAINDEA, Instructor ef Spantah, Linceta igh School | Wor the past few weeks there has| mands have been made been a discumdon in the columms ef|to formke their religion your paper relative to the Jews’ re | brace Christianity, and the pernecu- turn to Jerusalem. The signers to judging from their these ais Of a dis 4. |Cumion between two people in Ger . many whether the U. a eenate vuld pase the fourpower treaty, line, you would (or where Henry Ford should spend you'd changed (next summer's vacation, if he does I can't see what material | difference it can ponsibly make to these seemingly vermiile Bible «tu |dente from Omak, Wash. whether Canada and “the States” are ab | the Jews will go back to Jerusalem na, reiand men will leave police foree to flock | to enjoy the liberty so long & lom to understand *o eager © the Jews accept Christ. I red men whether in thelr entire lives it ever Teens Jew ever requested them te wcoopt the It ts a puzzle to me why people nhould constantly worry about the want him been a single [to change tt Why should the Jew the 3,000-mile | Sccept Christ tn order to go back to i! Jorumalem? frontier, ‘These gentlemen do not AIVRIDGE MANN. April Fools worth while. For April Foola may please or jar, depending on the sports we are; and I would add, I hate tho blokes who laugh at jokex on get het up and throw a fit when Jokes are and THICY are “it.” Ciritge Momm, GEOGRAPHIC PUZZLES know the We're safety ever April ist, the @xy the youngster# do ther worst; and even lots of grown-up folks contrive a lot of ernazy Jokes, and many sober-minded men go acting up like kids again. I guess a lot of trusting souls found malt was in their sugar bowls, or if they tried to enlt their meat, their milting only made it sweet; and caken and candy ethers tried, had cotton, like.as not, inside, And even on the pubic street were quite a Int of stunts to meet; the bogus ham the wagon dropped, the anchored dime at which you stopped, and then the old and honored trick—the package that contained a brick. The one I hate the most ef all, for which I always nearly fall, ts when they let me have a look at some forsaken pockstbook; I seem to feel a subtie pull that saya “Perhaps THIS one tx four But most important of the day were tricks the youngsters tried to play; for there in where the decent guya_will not let on that they are wise, but give the kids a chance to kmile, and make their j-IR = DOORWAY —DOQO = Wokwar Jew Writes on Jews’ Program Jews. Wor thousands cf years ée upes them and om tion they have undergone, the po groma they have suffered in order to worship thelr own God in thelr own way. Expelled from England, mur. dered in Spain and Portugal, hated in Germany, baited In Austria, they have endured in they may have their place in the sun More feoent Fussian history reads like a myth. Kishineff ts still fresh in the people's memory. In the late war Jew fought Jew in Nunnia and Aus tria, It haw been established as a fact that the Jews tn Russa were sent to the front without guns as fodder for the Austrian troops’ gun range. The Jews fought and gave until tt hurt, to bring the war to a victorious decision for the allina. lam 5 of the Jews. lar to all broad-minded men and wornen. The Jews have given much to finance, to ecience, to medicine, to art and munte. For thousands of years the Jew has dafly in his prayer Included the phrase “In the year to come in Je rusalem.” Let us be a tte more matertal Let us stop interpreting the Bible to fit a whim or an opinion. Was! | the late war fought for nanght? Was | the peace conference at Versailles merely child's play, or was the de cision for the «mighty powers sub-| servient to the whim of an interpre tation? It wae agreed that Armenians should get thetr country back. Have the gentlemen from Omak any ob- jections to that? The Arabs are to receive Arabia. Any objections? The Jown are to get back their land, the land which they once beautified and | ruled. The land which was taken from them by conquest. Why wasn’t | Germany permitted to keep Alsace. | Lorraine? Didn't ehe conquer it? Or| Belgium? But, of course, when it] comes to the Jew, you will find optn- ions from learned men all over, that the Bible mys and so and such and such, and there are a thonsand places where it mys “if the Jew) wants to go back to Jerusalem he} must accept Christ." Why not make | the Arabs accept Christ before you restore Arabia to them? There are millions of Jews with no religious freedom who will welcome If you value your watch, fet Haynes repair it. Next Liberty theatre. dv. SLOAN’S EASES PAIN RELIEVES THE ACHE JORMENTING, agonizing rhen- matic aches are quickly telieved by Sloan's Liniment. "Apply it freely, without rubbing and you will feel by comforting sense of warmth and relic Good also for rheumatism, sciatica, Tumt ago, neuralgia, soreness ,over-exert- ed muscles, stiff joints, backache, strains praing and weather exposure, don't let pain lay you up. Ke Sloan's Liniment handy and a the fine sign of an ache or pain, use it. For forty years, Sloan's has been the world's pain and ache liniment, Sloan's pinimegtaoclie'’s keep its many thou- sands of friends if it dido't make good, Asi your neighbor. | At all druggists—35e, 70c, $1.40. t going to sing the praiees | Their history ts fami | LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY AN ICIOUS, with Today's word in F IU» pronounced—per-ninh-un, on the second syllable. It means destructive, dangerous, evil, ruinous, fatal, hurtful, harm- ful, miachievour. It comes trom—latin, “pernicies,” dent ruction. It's used Ike this—The four power treaty was pasned dempite the belief of « group tn the senate that it was @ pernicious document.” accent the return of their land which they oan ones more rebeautify and make flow with milk and honey, It ts » back to the Holy Land, who does not care to, any mdére than it is for « Beotehman to go Wack to the British ides There are many subjects of greater im. portance to the average man today than whether the Jew should or should not accept Chriat, if he wishes to go back to Palestine, any more than it would be © ton an Irish man to become a Protestant if he wants to go back to Ireland. A JEW. Editor The Star: Keferring to our letter of March 28th, relative to discourteous treat ment of an Oregon motorist on the highways of Lewis county by « main. tenance crew. It gives us pleamure to enclose herewith Copy of a letter just re ceived from Jamen Allen, supervisor of etate highways, eddremsed to his dintrict engineer at Vancouver. You will note that Mr. Allen em. that the public munt be treated with respect by the maintenance crews or he will get fomeone to maintain the roads who will treat the public courteously. ‘This for your information. Very truly yours, D, SHELOR, Manager, Automobile Club of West ern Washington. MR. ALLEN’S LETTER Mr. R. M. Gillig, District Engineer, 612% Main St, Vancouver, Wash. Dear Sir: I am in receipt of copy of better from Mr. D. Lee, member of the Oregon State Motor associa tion, complaining of discourteous treatment received by/him from the maintenance crew just south of Toledo, Pease tnatroct your maintenance engineer to make it plain to the maintenance crew tn his district that they are working for the public and being paid by the public and a little courtery does not cost anything. Also, make it plain to them that ff they cannot be courteous to people uring state roads we will get some- one tbat can. Very respectfalty yours. Gigned) JAMES ALLEN, Supervisor of Mighwaya, MARK BABRE 1s introdneed to the reader by— HAPGOOD, ® garrulous London solicitor, who went to school with him and who has just renewed his acquaintance with him At this time—1912—~ Sabre ts 34 and is Living with bis wife | MABEL BABRE, in Penny Green, an Engtish village seven miles trom Tidborough, where Babre is in businesas—"seven miles by road and about seven centuries in manners and customs,” but now being “improved” by a pushing development company. Hapgood suspects Mark and Mabel are not wuited to each other after visiting them in their home. He explains Sabre, even in his childhood, was remarkably tolerant—always able to see the other fellow’s point; whereas his pretty wife is a typical and violently opinionated gomdp. ‘Their temperamental Gifference was first brought out when they firet went to their home, immediately after their marriage, Mabel insisted on calling Mark's room his “den,” @ word which the latter particularly detests, while Mark aroused Mabel because he immediately nicknamed their serv- anty, the Jinks sisters, “High and “Low Jinka” Mark thought it ever, however, the night after, and characteristically decided his wife couldn't be blamed for their apparently trivial, but irksome, differences, This difference of viewpoint, however, builds up something tke @ bond of sympathy between Mark and “High” and “Low.” They don't understand him any more than does his wife—but they like his whimeical ways and they form innocent little “plots” to further what Mabel calls bis “doings” Mark has an interest im the firm ef Fortune, Kast and Sabre, historic deal- ¢rx in church and school supplies, His grandfather had been tricked into turning over his partnership to REV, SEBASTIAN FORTUNE, and since that time the Sabres have had no voice in the conduct of the firm, Mark, whe is in charge of the pub- lishing department, has been promised an eventual partnership. TWYNLNG is in a similar position, having charge of the workshops with- out being a partner. Mark is particularly interested in a new text-book which bh preparing—“England,” « history written along a new and revolutionary line Mabel utterly falls to see tt as anything but a “Teeson book,” and Mark rtopn mentioning it to her. Starving for sympathy at home, he turns te other friends for friendship. His friends are MR. FARGUB, & peculiar old fellow, much hen-pecked by his splaster daughters, and THE PERCHES, consisting of young Perch, whom Mark calls “Young Rod, Pole or Perch,” and his mother, a strong-minded womaa much wrapped up in ber son, While cycling to Tidborough Mark encounters NONA TYBAR, bin childhood sweetheart, who ts riding with her dashing and debonair husband, LORD TYBAR. Altho the couple present a carefree exterior, Mark senses something of a mental conflict between them, and, while he does pot con~ sclousty realize it, some of his old ardor tor Nona reappears. Now go on with the story, CHAPTER I fica When he had disposed of it he eat some little time staring ab went-mindedly at the cases whereon were ranged the books of his pub- Meation. Then he took out the man-|Mr. Fortune's special att uscript of “England” and turned over | disclosing @ serious the pages. He wondered what Nona | ish in a set of desks and he would think of it He would like to|to head clerk when Sabre tell her about Cambridge. On the day that ‘Twyning came tn. entered the firm he had been Spearmint are certainly three delightful flavors to choose from. sugar-coated peppermint gum,isa — great treat for your sweet tooth. where perfection’ rules. Twyning rarely entered Sabre’s| probation” in the position room. Sabre did net enter Twyning’s| held, and on the day tha: twice ina year. Their work ran on/| father retired he had been separate lines and there was some.|in the position. He regarded thing, unexpressed, the reverse of |4* an amateur and he was pri much mympathy bdetwrem them. | disturbed by the fact that « ‘Twyning was an olfer man than (Turn to Page 11, Column Juicy Fruit, Peppermint and And WRIG@LEY’S P-K—the new All from the Wrigley factories — wrappers. They are good for valuable premiums. ¥ Sioa | Liniment SUM) <a 2 Sap FLAVOR mai =f) eee et ff a, a eee ee ee eee oe

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