The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 19, 1922, Page 6

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SEATT LE STAR FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1922. President Harding has refused the invitation to assist the allies in reaching an agreement with Russia. This was a grave mistake, It should be cor- rected as soon as possible. Unless there is an agreement, an agreement that will include a reduction of armaments and & general peace pact, there will almost surely be another world war soon, in which the remnant of white civilization, ourselves included, will go down to the dust. Genoa has failed. National rivalries, animosi- ties, ambitions and fears, for a time dormant, are now thoroly awake. The freshly re-grouped powers of Europe stand glaring at each other 5.00, Im the state of W: Outside 44.60 for @ monthe, or 8 be explained by the self-made merchant to his son. the Saturday Evening Post to despair of America’s future. trines of Judge Gary. general condemnation of capitalism’s treatment of labor. The Seattle St By mall, out of ctty, He per month; # months, F150; ¢ mentha # ‘ But the Saturday Evening Post has never been able to sway intellectual America. The Organ of intellectual America is the Atlantic Monthly. In the May issue of that maga- “tine appears an indictment of the steel trust such as must cause the success hunters of Please correct the mistake that The terrible toil of the 12-hour shift in a steel mill hell is related by Charles Rumford | Kine Walker, Jr., culminating in a picture of death and cremation horrible enough for Dante. [at the time the _ fare. Intellectual America thus supports religious America in condemning the doc- | Matt went ux The World Adrift - - - ready-to fly at one another's throats. Only a mighty moral force like the United States can save the day; this is everywhere ad- mitted, Europe admits it, and in her invitation, really a cry for help, there is a note almost of despair, “Save us or we peris America can- not conscientiously refuse to answer that cry. President Harding should name the conditions under which this country would be willing to participate, then appoint the strongest possible delegation to the conference. Officially, Charles E. Hughes, secretary of state, should head that delegation. His showing at the Washington con- ference and the prestige he now enjoys in Europe entitle him to that distinction, Says Firemen tor The Star In regard to the lady who was #0 Success—Gary— Wages er gt had nothing to do with finding her The fire was put out by tie follow jon that responded to _ Success breeds contempt for the poor fool who is unable to rise above his pick and | {)* [rs companion that Sennonins’ U to a swivel chair and a desk. That is the Saturday Evening Post theory of } Ss can life. The Lorimer editors are strenuous searchers for the kind of success that The iady was not fount until the gine companies 15, 4 and 26; truck apany 4 and squad company 1 fire wan out, which was 10 oF 16 minutes before the police arrived on Editor The Star was printed In The Btar Tuesday about the herolam of Mra L. H We were on the bank of the canal no® overturned The two boys struggled together In an accompanying article, Kirby Page indicts the United States Steel Corporation for j¢oc° 4 while. bot at inet the Coder underpaying its workers and ranking profits on watered stock higher than public wel- | BY rn Een. SWAM TO SHORE der and that was t last seen of b until the police patrol boat brought him up with a drag hook More than that, the Atlantic Monthly's purpose is not to single out the steel indus- [7 Qonceainy to your statement Mre try for exceptional accusations, but rather to make the facts about steel serve as a L, H. King «wam out and rescued Frank Coder, That ls a LIE, and Here is a matter that cannot | that Carnegie medal in undeserved be thrust aside by the Lorimer ~ paint ooog ong ght Beapid Pons Too many people are libirs and thelr favorites. The licenses would expire. ‘Baturday Evening Post can do a writers on success to answering years until 1923. a labor be regard- ‘ef as 2 commodity to be pur What Shall haved at the lowest pole rate. Te Profit? errr sae eect of -conintntn- Seeretary Mellon's latest re- port shows $3,136,619,407.33 in gold coln and bulllon stored tn the nation’s strong box. An inconceivable sum—nothing like it before in all the histories of all the nations since time be- gan. And this ts not all. In the vaults of banks and trust com- panies, in private safety deposit boxes, in old stockings and mat- | Becond—What are the costs to seclety of driving mothers and “children under 16 into industry Because of the inadequacy of the fathers’ wage? ‘Third—Is invested capital eth- feally entitled to an annual re- Pecan tte Seettes the pase treseea and buried tin cans. of ent of inadequate wages to un, thousands of misers, lie hundreds "killed aableiee? upon hundreds of millions more tk whet should be our ° (he yellow metal Mtitude toward overcapitalization, _ Y** We have the gold of the the watering of stock and the world, the credit of the world, the ok paint foodstaffs and clothing and lands smell Should be our at- 224 houses and minerals and pre- _ titude toward employers who hold om eee, fm their t is Ge Qnetniots com ‘What shall it profit s man if Gentration of economic power and he galn the whole world and ‘who refuse to bargain collectively 1% his own soul?” asked the With their workers thru repre- Oftat Teacher. Sastatives of the workers’ own Amd He might have added, ? “What shall it profit a nation?” gual Bay hiae With the wealth of the world In On one occasion when a flood (of UT possession, we still refuse to the Los Angcies river) occurred a accept the responsibilities of mor. few years ago 20 much sediment 9) lendership in a world too full Sas brought down that there was Tess than five feet of water in the % Woe Rarbor (Los Angeles) at a place 2 if | Where there had been 85 feet be- My God shall supply alt your D Yore the flood. It practically de- need, according to His riches and a Stroyed the usefulness of the har- glory.—Philippiana jw. :19 > Bor until it could be redredged. 3 Rage] And it was quite a costly project. The central thought of religion ts Brig. Gen. Harry Taylor, U. 8. A. Of a peace that is beyond the un- Before senate commitice on appro- rest of life, of a harmony that priations. transcends ali its discorda, of a wae ee tunity of purpose which worka thru Our idea of bad luck is a woman all the conflict of the forces of Being tried for killing her husband nature, and the atill more intense @nd three old maids on the jury. conflict of the wills of men—Ed- - ward Caird. Every year we remind college - Oraduates their medal isn’t worth Titinots woman judge ts holding @s much as their mettle. court in her home. That's where — - they usually lay down the law. Doyle might say spirits rapping : FOR A CONSTIPATED CHILD A emall dose of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will bring quick relief, ‘OTHER, when one of the children is constipated are you Going to give the first lax- ative within reach? It is dan- us to do so. £yme have nm known to rupture the intestines of little children. Don't be beguiled by the out side sugary appearance. Look om Pend formula. Calomel is | seldom necessary; salts, wil) find it isnot necessary to take minerals, coal tar, never! it every day, nor to increase the | Unlike these, Dr. Caldwell’s dose, and that it is pleasant to the Syrup Pepsin {s admirable for taste. Bottles can be had at ail iidren, as it is for grown drug stores, and the cost is only | le, too. Mothers have about a cent a dose. Have no Reeb givin, it to children for hesitancy giving it to a baby in 90 years. The heged it foes arms. It is absolutely safe, not » and is free from ¥ ell ting {The formula ison ai ae fag Fi cing every package, and you can [eM cae core at thiy moment Lorine sed bee fis vegetable, just a.com. Se f.lasaine of tl mone ‘ofr str bination of Egyptian Sennaand Pern FREE OF CHARGE 40 that you wil other laxative herbs with pep- have handy when needed, Simply send your tame and addres to Dr. W, B Caldwell, st sin Use it yourself and you Washingwon Se., Monticello, lil. Wrie me today’ J | a4 ( vies te entigaing te According to the “Weeks” planned it will be six | 0% wishing their marriage Are Our News or, T suppose, are experts on news vaiden. Or at least you ware 1 have before me paper. I read that a @atly news. ton meteor | following five questions which - _— has struck the earth This ts : Mont! i 4 ‘ raise are vrice. “good” news. I read tha an at the Atlantic Monthly gona? in Only thing Wall Street farmers raise are prices. | ;£0% Pas 7 read than an at ot Kirby Page's revelations: Pes sv u —— | to aetties a great longxhore strike. ood” news. 1 read Are You elbinaten Atanas that the great Roosevelt highway Hen-Pecked? in Washington is to be pushed for: A secret organization of hen re eee Children Vanquish Insects Sonik tome Gee istence continuously since the year 3897 B. ©. according to a claim set forth on this interest Alter The Star: While we have been carrying on a campaign to exterminate the ear ing fraternity’s betterhead. wi, the beve and wivle of Bectiie Any husband who feels that he | have been carrying on « campaien picked a lemon in the garden of [of their own which ia very impr from the standpoint of the Beautiful” 1 refer to the ( caterpillar love, and wants to join, should | write to the Ancient and Honor. | able International Order of Hen Buch year in the early epring pecked Husbands, Ite headquar | Miss Julia Shourek, supervisor of ters are at Sowerby, near Brad- | gardens of the publ ols, getn ford, England. |thousands of school children inter. ented in gathering egg bands. Each Application, are stgitty probed, | |: shows « decrease in the num to keep the organization exclusive for the superiatively hen-peched. Women might » ber of egg bands found and a cor « decrease in the number respond rt as similar (of cater iar tents tha woop society. For every hen-pecked |!ater on. We are cptimistic enough jto think that these children are basbend, share ave af least twe |0o ts ria Meattic of ene of the rooster-gecked wives, The Jok® | most dinagreeable inwect pests that writers, however, are quiet about | infest» our locality that. They are men. | Stuart Walsh, in charge of the boy scouts, assures us that the boy scouts are very much tn this cam When God Almighty makes two hille without a hollow, when He makes night without day, when e e He makes the aun without heat, T bill that ia honest.Senator Stan- | Editor The Star ley (DJ), Ky. | The news dispatches In the Van |couver, B. C. papers last week con paign, too. The city has supplied Recompense unto no man evil for evil.—Romans wit. :17. ee | news items regarding the question of anese immigration to North joa that has yet appeared. The m The best way to revenge thyself fs not to become like the wrong- doer.—Marcus Aurelius | Let's lend R wants on co case. "United they atand, divided they fali” is shown in Ireland—dividing patriots gives us pat riots. Prlippines have doubled their debt again, They will soon be qualified for independence. tables are impatient for waiters to Fly paper doesn't draw as many The war did some good, It gave | ““—~sasSSa ig anewes ST. i's ANSWER bring their orders. flies as limousines do friend: us something to blame everything | OP — + BILL -L +E In Africa, brides are paid for on the installment plan, Same here. | LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY Today's word is LEGATION, It's pronounced—le-ga-shun, with | accent on the second syllable. { It means—the place of business or | official residence of a diplomatic | minister of a foreign court or seat of government; in common parls used in distinction from “emb: the official residence of an amb dor, or minister of the highest rank An embassy is a legation, since an am sad lor is a ministe but a lega s not necessarily an embassy, | much as it may not be occupied by a minister of an ambassador's rank | It comes from —legate, which in| turn {# from Latin “legatus,"” to | depute or deputize, the minister be. | Ing deputized to represent his govern: | ment. 1 It's used ke this—’The forelgn | powers have sent marines to Peking to guard their legations against at- | All First-Class § McKale Tire Co. 1201 Pine Street | the existing treaty between Gr | July 17, 1923, and urged that the | the British government be give , CAnadian parliament at Ottawa on! Extraordinary Sale —OF— GOODYEAR TIRES rence camera eee tee] Limit Two (2) Tires to a Purchaser Miller Lowe Tire Co. - - And Harding Refuses ‘At the opening session of this new European conference, speaking as one with authority, Mr. Hughes should arise in his place and, just as he did at the arms conference, set forth a states- manlike, comprehensive, humane, disinterested plan for worldwide reconstruction, His words would find such an echo in the weak hearts of plain folks everywhere that Europe would subside perforce. There might be revolutions, a toppling of autocratic and mili- taristic powers, but there would be no war in Europe. Mr. Harding is woefully misreading the signs of the times if he persists in his refusal to accept that Canada ¢ ired its termi the abrogation of the ereement” of 1907 between Canada and Japan under which some Saved Woman curtaliment of Japanese immigration | has been brought about } Two important circumstances fea ture this action of the Ottawa par: | Mament; The large majority by which | |the resolution was passed, and the| unanimity and vigor of the stand) taken by the representatives from British Columbia during the debate |The overwhelming vote in favor of men to rush into burnin, bullding* | the resolution bears out what those because it is their duty, but I pever/ tenting for Japanese exclusion in yet heard of @ policeman “eins It | this country have long contended, ' FIREMAN'H WIFE. | namely, that the East is alive to the mG waa menace of further Japanese immi j the ncene Memiwers of the squad wagon found her and also worked on ly for half an hour with the luogmotor to keep her alive until the doctor arrived The necond battalion chet was in narge of operatio It is & common occurrence for fire. Woman’s Heroism Questioned yma be A rs, by any woman who would deceive | the Pacific Coast states will present |the public by such statements an/a united front and insist upon that she made to your reporter, Hal|national action which President | Armstrong Roosevelt advocated in 1908, and There were no youths In bathing | which the situation now imperative suite standing on the bank, The ly demands i only person who stood panto-strick-| Some of the points brought out in en in a bathing sult was Mra. L. H.lthe debate in the Canadian parlia King. She was the only one in|ment are refreshing to those who| swimming at the time of the trage-| have been watching the fight which | dy and she was too frightened to as-|the senators and representatives sist the boys. from California have been making in| We are rp earned enough In the | congress for the past 16 yea: art of swirn © rescue & person) Mr. McQuarrie pointed out that the, In that condition or we would eure: | Japanese birth rate in British Colum. | ly have done all we could. | bia in 1921 as compared to the total w LEY DAVIS, 124 W, Canal St.) was one in 14. Gn Seattic it was| CLAI CE KING fo relation to/1 in 7.6) He showed that the Jap. | the heroine), 119 W. 40th St Janene owned or operated 60 logging mncmneatgna jcamps, had a monopoly of the fish- ? erties Values Wrong? oo Iward to completion. This, too, ts | Stork of Skeena believed the question | “goed” news. [should be settled while the white And given equal prominence with | Population was still in possession of | the province, He stated that the) Japanese were rolling up the map of | Western Canada so that some day | have wronged her greviously, fa «| ‘¢ summit of the Rocky metagrgrid very cheap, stupid, vulgar little girl.| Would be the western Roun re Mn | Why do you “experts” give the | called attention to the prospect of | Atbuckies and Posey |race mongrelization, He warned that | page? Is it be leven if no more Japs came there was | cause we like to read that kind of | «tii! a tremendous problem with the} stuff? I don’t. Or is it because you | pirth rate. T, G. Meliride of Caribou} ‘ao? D. K. B. | declared that if the present influx | was not checked the white race would nd were exploiting all the nat wurces of the province. Fred the meteor, the strike and the bleh way In a story about Peggy Hop kins, who, unless the newspaper the Rockies in Black of Yukon | im with 100 torches and all of the | said that in the ‘th the question | had been dealt with by the pick han- die method and advocated not only I¢ the public will| the future exclusion of Japanese but notify the state horticultural de-ltne deportation of those now here. ment, 417 county-city bufléing, Hon. J. H. King, premier of British {Ol necessary to complete the clean up this year. ot caterpitiars, Mr. Walth says he will ity of suc have the boy scouta go after them | white race to fully equipped | petition, the desirability of maintain: |eise? Except in a few cases the an-| BEST $2.50 GLASSES 7 on Earth Thin year, under Miss Shourek's|ing the racial homogeniety of our |swer ts to be found in a atate of free- | direction, the school children gath-| people and the impossibility of assim-|aom from the troubles known as “fe- ered a total of 669,932 egg bands | tiation of the oriental races. He|maile." The well woman radiates nd, in addition. she haw requested | warned against that unrest which 1s cheerfulness and serenity, while the | stores ta the school children to report any | always at the danger point wherever | ailing one repels because of her lack | ert caterpillar tents that are now show. |the two races come together. Rt./of these qualities. It is not neces-| " | Hon. Arthur Melghen said that @ 4® sary, however, to harbor aches and| SEATTLE—ON FIRST avm ast year the city councfl appro: | cision must be made and that the | nains, and the “blues” that makeone| Examination free, by graduate op- priate? $7,500, and¢ this department, | Whole west was in a state of alarm|a detriment to society. The use of|tometrist. Glasses mot prescribed conjunction with the department by reason of the oriental aggressions Lyaia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com. | unless absolutely necessary. of horticulture, cleaned up over a|in the western provinces. |pound has brought relief to such| thousand city lota and many streets. | By contract with this action of the |women, and given them a new tease (BINYON OPTICAL co. We stand ready to cooperate this | Canadian parliament we find con-jon life.—Advertisement. year by furnishin material to the boy scouts and in an advisory and educational capacity 0. A. PIPER, | Supt. of Streets and Sewers. Bodies and Japs May 8 struck boldly and frankly at the Japanese question in adopting by a vote of 120 to 34, a resolution demanding “effective restriction” of all orlental immigration. WwW. G. Me of New Westminster, who 1 the resolution, explained mity for a modification of Fares L To Yellowstone To Chicago. To New York . = MOBILE tock—Guaranteed 1122 Pine Street ¥ tente made by the young |Columbia, emphasized the impossibil-| pa 1 ppy. beloved and successful, while . esntul resistance by the |othern drag out a Negative existence, Free Examination panese economic com-/of no use to themselves or anyone | To Eastern Points From Seattle, Round Trip ‘To St. Paul-Minneapolis 72.00 To Kansas City . 72.00 Corresponding fares to all points East and South Go this year while costs are low Northern Pacific Ry. Three All-Steel Trains For full information about summer tours, dates of sale and limits, write te E.L.Carey,Gen. Agt., Smith Bidg., Seattle. Phone Elliett S580 for America the moral leadership of the world continually held out. It is no rare occurrence at theaters and other places where people foregather to hear a thunder of applause greet the mention of the name or the sight of a picture of former President Wilson. And these manifestations are growing. The reason should be obvious even to the most obtuse of political leaders. Wilson is coming more and more to represent in people’s minds the Christ-like ideal of universal peace and the Christ-like ideal of helping one another to achieve it. At present we are only drifting—and towards what? A Petter rom AIVRIDGE MANN. Dear Folks: 1 do not blush when I confess I've never played @ game of chess; perhaps I'm just a trifle tough, and think of chess as high brow stuff; for tho they say It’s mighty fine, it takes a bigger brain than mine. And when I've stood and watched o game, it seemed to me @ trifie tame; for all they do, that I have found, is move the chess» men all around, end make them move or fall or stand, according to the game's demand. But 1 admire those little things—the humble pawns, the stately qeeesTiz2ai. They cannot even understand—and yet how straight they stand! They seem to play their parte with pride, last, they're laid aside; and win or lose, and stand or trust the hand that guides them all BYSES_.. 0 EuhRTER SRE 8 Ess i ee And so I figure, more or less, that life ts like a game directed by a master mind, we do the work we each may find; king or pawn, we stand or fall, in some great game that us all So when I see the chessmen stand, responsive to their hand, I hope I'll stand as firm and straight, to play my part meet my fate, and tho I cannot know the aim, I'll trust the that guides game. at grexs postponing for two more years | well to follow at the earliest possible the entire subject of Japanese exclu-| date. sion despite the effort of the Califor | 4#**- PHILIP TINDALIA —————$———$—$$_— nia delegation to incorporate a clause providing for such exclusion in the so-called 3 per cent law by which im- migration from other countries is now regulated. This action was ta’ en by congress notwithstanding the oft-repeated declarations of the na- tional conventions of the American Federation of Labor, of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and other organizations, It was tak- en in the face of vigorous telegraphic protests from the department offi- claly of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the three Pacific Coast states, It was taken in disregard of the ant!Japan- ese land legislation of California, Washington, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Nebraska and Delaware. The Canadian parliament has set an example which congress would do E i FE WHY ARE SOME WOMEN POPULAR, pce yg ‘We are os Gees 8 259 Bee Seede Peas Bees. owest in Years! Park . $38.25 To Denver . . . $69.00 + + + 86.00 To St.Louis . . 81.50 - + « 147.40 To Washington . 141.60 operates daily with Pullman Service 9:15 A.M. Famous North Coast Limited To Chicago via St. Paul-Minneapolis. 3:35 P. M. 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