The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 25, 1922, Page 6

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by an anthracite! The Seattle Star ublished Dally by The Star Publishing Co. paper Enterprise Association and United city, t mate montha, or Yellow Americans A subscriber writes: “Your recent Japanese editorial ‘was good, but why don’t you touch up the gentry who ‘are responsible for inflicting this Jap problem upon us? ‘The Jap is yellow, but he is true to his own race, always. ‘The Coast had a lot of cheap yellow-minded white men who brought the Japs in because they would work for Tess than Caucasians would, and, just as the railroads and mines 50 years ago brought in the Chinese to deflate white workers, so mistaken employers brought in Japs. Now, when the Jap has a toehold and begins to get into ‘big business, and to lease fine homes ‘longside these Jap- Joving capitalists, there is an awful howl from some of The Star in the past has paid its respects to the va- ious interests on the Coast that attempted to use the Jap to pander to their greed; it welcomes a chance anew to add a few more words. The Jap is a gentleman, he is loyal to his own, The ‘Star admires him as an individual, and we don’t blame him for trying to edge us out of a good thing. We ly refuse, for our part, to be edged out. But for those American citizens who have been chiefly ‘Tesponsible for forcing the Jap problem on the Coast, ‘and for those secret interests that even today are at- ‘tempting to promote the Asiatic in competition with white men in a white man’s country, The Star has the dl undest contempt. These men deserve public men- Bai and public scorn; they are doing more to destroy | peace and prosperity in the West than all the forces of , communism, red flagism and loose agitating ined. For they are willing to sell the heritage of the race for a few yellow dollars. we had our way about it we would deport every “white” Jap lover to the land of the cherry and do it pronto. fe seo where Guv Hart has decided that the state aan m. 19.00 per year, By carrie is to have a week,” starting October 9. So we suppose Loule must be getting te announce he’s not going to run again. Or perhaps he figures - will have pald the poll tax by Press. A homely woman looks much better than » pretty man. What Kind of a Boss Have You? body has a boss, whether he works or not. The tt has 110,000,000 bosses and every soul of the ed and ten million in turn has a private boss. The it in the desert, living on snared rabbits and broiled es, has a boss, his stomach. Rockefeller has half a bosses, each one of them a hundred cents’ worth _ of worry and responsibility. _. About 45,000,000 of us ig this country have a human _— who directs us on our job, and about three million us today are loafing because we don’t like the boss, A few bull-headed bosses appear to have instituted and kept alive the railroad strike, a few broad-minded bosses have kept several other big industries going ahead with- out friction. _ What constitutes a good boss, and what a bad boss? worker has his ideal of the sort of a boss he to work for, and if his ideal is attained he loses grouch, and achieves efficiency, except when he is @ hopelessly lagging, nagging, fretful, loafing malcontent. The Star’s opinion is that the boss who gets results is the boss who first of all knows at least as much as the best man under him about the job. The boss should be to do efficiently anything his men are doing. American workman takes a pride in his work, if he gets a square deal, and it is to be doubted if up-stage executives ever attain real success in handling white men. A sympathy that gets the employe’s viewpoint, and a broad-mindedness that enables the boss to admit when he is wrong, are worth more than endowment insurance, | old-age pensions, profit divisions or noon prayer meetings _ with hot dogs and coffee. No club ever drove a real American anywhere. 4 In Boston, = speeder hit = seven-story building. They say he claims ___. Lord Robert Cecil says he hopes to lecture in America. It sounds more Mike a-threat. Some towns are lucky. Bernadotte, Ill., has no phones, Enterprise of Lewiston, Idaho A year ago this month 25 executives of important Se- attle business houses visited Lewiston, Idaho, to confer with business leaders there over problems of mutual t. Among other interesting facts, these Seattleites learned that Lewiston had just completed a campaign to raise $500,000 for a community hotel. Now that building (the Lewis-Clark it is called) is nearing completion. On September 28-30 it will be for- mally dedicated. The Star is told it is one of the finest ae possessed by any city of that size in the United Lewiston is to be congratulated, and so is the rest of the Pacific Northwest. It is strings of such hotels in all the strategic centers and near all the scenic points of vantage that will insure us our due meed of tourists in the coming years. Seattle should be officially represented by a fine, big ‘delegation at Lewiston’s house-warming, and these envoys should carry the whole city’s message of good wishes and congratulation. It is the business of anybody who can to set right what anybody has tet wrong.—Anon. Years and yeare ago twin beds were beds with twins in them, Sometimes we think the man who never acts a fool is one, @ It’s the other fellow that needs the uplift. in its government. Let us pray that no country decides to treat us that way. man, but there’s a lot about the railroad brotherhoods. million Russian rubles are worth a dollar. Pay no more. a new play. One says it is because he hates to stay there alone. oan THE SEATTLE STAR Pt partner PP PPP PP Pee a aa @ The hard coal miners have returned to work, but do you think hard coal will be any cheaper? Not @ We lamp in the public prints that the United States may intervene in Cuban affairs unless that country stamps out corruption @ You don’t hear so much talk these days about the brotherhood of @ Reading the cables from Europe, we see that to the victor belongs the broils. @ Seven @_A new dancer is called Wladislau, but not very often. HE CAN NOW RESUME HIS JOURNEY B teuls Because, while in the British secret service, he has earned the murder ous hatred of the Bolsheviki, ANDRE DUCHEMIN ts eummartly “dismissed” by the government and ordered to leave the country at once. | mnroats maid, * not slaves Protect this will vote Yen f Washington are or chatte! and desire to preserve and they happy condition on Referendum No. 13 next November BE. C. JACKSON \Cure for Blinding Oya Internationa! bagazine Company (Headlights | Editor The Star: A whole jot has been said of the menace of biindjng headilghts, but nothing has been done. WERTHEIMER, the official who brings the news, gives Duchemin «| there t» & law against them, but handsome sum to be used on his travels. best escape from the revengef'il Bolshevik by following Stevenson's itiner- ary in his “Travels With a Donkey.” He is soon tramping tn the Cevennes, the little-known bills In the south ot France. Reaching the deserted city of Montpeliierle-Vieux, he te sur prined to see a peasant and « man dressed as an American soldier duck into the ruins. Following the pair, Duchemin finds them attacking | NSIEUR D'AUBRAC, while 4'Aubrac’s fiancee, MADEMOISELLE DE MONTELAIS; her grandmother, MADAME DE SEVENIE, and the widow of the latter's grandson MADAME EVE DE MONTELAIS, look on in horror. Duchemin goes to the rescue and succeeds In killing the peasant and driving the man in uniform away He accompanies the party back to Nant, where he stops at the Grand Hotel de I'Univers. He ts half in love with Eve de Montelais | A mysterious party comes to the hotel, woman They are obviously Americans, and so, Duchemin discovers, is the lovely Eve de Montelais, with whom he has dinner that night Now go on with the story | Continued From Saturday) once more! j The animation with which this And then the war, the short month of long, long days in the! fon was delivered proved apartment on the avenues des/ transient. | Champs-Elysees, walting, waiting,| “Then I remind myself I have no while the earth tggmbied to the|one there—a few friends, yes, ac tramp of armed men and the tire-/quaintances; but no family ties, no lesa rumbling of caisson® and cam-| one dear to me.” fons, and the air was vibrant with) “But—pardon—you stay here?” the savage dialogue of cannon, ever! louder, daily more near... | She fell silent, sitting with bowed | " | head and gaze remote, } . Still, Lam fond of the From the splendid jewels that/ lite here; it was here I found my adorned the fingers twisting togeth-| self again, after my grief. And I er in her lap, the firelight struck) am fond of my adopted mother and Coruscant gleams. | Louise, too, and they of me, In “Now I hate Paris; I wish never|deed, I am all they have. left to nee it again.” | Louine, of course, will marry before Duchemin uttered a sympathetic) jong; Georges”-——she used d'Aubrac's murmur. jxiven name— “will take her away, “But New York [then Madame de Sevenie will have “Ah, but sometimes I think Ij nobody but me A at her age, would give something to be there | (Turn to Pa "It ts beautiful here, monsieur.” Editor The Star: supplied by the assessor should be! By a light vote in the primary| filed. All taxpayers failing to report the officers who will attend ‘to ig | Hoe. be fined a per cent of their tax. All voters (no age limit) should important affairs of our great BOY-| by taxed $6; the tax canceled if he! ernment have, in the majority of| votes in both primary and election, offices, been elected. |the only valid exeuse bein, abil Good government depends upon ity sworn to by two qualified physi- the vote of the people. Some law! cians. | to promote voting should be passed.) A law of this nature would “get Many stay at home, saying “it is no} out the vote,” the tax question use.” day in counties with dominating | near representative government, parties should be legal holidays, On| these days, questionairey previously | Urges “Yes” Vote | Editor The Star | In recent issue of The Star appears a letter from J, W. Gilbert] discussing Referendum No. 13 | In justice to Mr. Gilbert let it be said that his statement to the effect | that bill 180 does not interfere with | nor hinder the operation of the pres- | ent law governing contagion is quite correct. One would think this ought to satisfy the medicas. The writer makes no attempt to defend any one of the drugless sys tems of healing, but only wishes to point out that the drug system has no right to ask a monopoly of the healing business thru political con. trol, Let each system stand or fall on its own merits. From Mr, Gilbert's Yours truly, | ORVILLE B. BEEBM, | on Referendum 13 | might infer that only the user: drugs have any regard for hygier or sanitation. An honest investig on will prove that the non-drug users, a @ class, are extraordinarily particular along these lines. As for the exigency or benefits| of using or not using drugs the writer wishes to remark that hu- manity 4s rapidly dropping drugs only after ceaseless disappolitments from their use; were this not #0, | and if “modern medical pract is as efficacious as Mr. Gilbert claims, these doctors would be com. pelled to barricade their doors) againat the rush that would right. fully be theirs, Whereas now t are ceaselessly attempting to legia- late their medicine down our letter one a three men and a beautiful |p Ealtor ‘The | 1 have been informed Duchemin decides that he can/| like many others, never enforced. I would suggest a way by which law-abiding cure those humane motorists can drivers. who insist on bilnding every one coming towards them ‘comes clone, iw to be blinded, then in time they | may be cured, Let them take the} diteh once or twice ng then, that tearing along a yad with no when a man full on him When one mes a pair of lelaring Mghts, if he would turn his spotlight on the driver's face as he! letting him feel how it] It won't keep thought of w coming ih you would print this so as has a spotlight turned he may know why Youra truly, 5622 Eleve MARGARET RISSE. ntn Ave. N. California’s Traffic Officers fornia ‘open Star: Itizens will soon Install an | rol” system of state roads to take the place of speed traps The Los Angeles motorist is tired | of the offic brush and then creeps out upon him | as he breaks the | er who hides in the} mit Then new program calls for a sys tem where uniformed motoreycle men ride back and forth on estab lished tempt to beats.” hide from the autotat California ty doing something that The bluecoat on the street gives His pres. ence tells us that laws should not to | Washington should copy § t), hun a warning at all times. ‘ | be broken. 1 f he should hide behind \® fence day after day, we would all become eneaks. Let Washington, Would Compel Folks to Vote |ronds fh the bluecoat “boat I think it too, patrol her manner. will be a better cure for the speeder and road hog and will also assist in bettering traffic conditions There are e and f, the alphabet Yesterday's answer Pope, Byron, and Hlemans. D. K. B. Brain Testers ) two English words, Election day and primary| would be solved and we would have| Which contain, each of them, 10 let-| jters, and six of these are abe d the first six letters of| Can you build up |elther or both of these two words? Gray, Moore, Dryden, Gay, Keats Marcel Waving Permanent Way p expertence. appointments, or Ala blige ay PRADA LLP LA AAPL PL PPP PPP PLP PPP PL PPP r, Gilbert has well I believe that Call. | There will be no at-} whan atm aby Sento SE as atch eal we ae nr MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1999 _—— @ “Wiy Men Leave Home” jg SCIENCE Mealy Bug Beatie Has Been a Puzzle, Entomologists Win, Discover Parasite, Lh ore SsseW ‘ Wea CONFESSION HILE you were near I could bravely sdy I would not care If ever you should go some newer way And I not there. | ‘The tatest trumph of sclenon dy the defeat of the mealy bug, ‘This exasperating pest has been & puzzle to the entomologists and 9 an expensive annoyance to everyene | that raised plants or trees, No | The amount of care seemed to keep fi useless and fam, ligation would not kill it unless gap I thought that I could freely walk alone Without your heart Beside me on the old roads of our own, pica = was used to kill the 7 If we should part. nee out, spraying it news of all was that 7] started attacking been ransacked enemy or pam | it, without sue 4 bele introduced | Crypyoloemus Montrouziert Muleaat [Jt does the work. This meany ¢ saving of millions of dollars to the | people of thin When you had gone and did not come again, Without you near, I knew that all my bravery was in vain, cess until Albert K My dear, my dear! — — “1 country and the te turn of many persons employed in |the fight 40 more productive work, 7 Prof. Ensig of the agricultural de qe: partment of the University of Calle ot fornia is making @ study of thel “ | friendly parasite. 7 4 king, or other high and mighty thing, might arise and » “Toda: be a holiday!” It wouldn't be a great abuse—t've got a pretty fair excuse; EVERY DAY ' you know, about 400 years ago, was when Balboa i saw otr noble Western se splendid vision burst, Balboa cried, “I saw it Today's word is—Bosporus, first! So I declare that I'm the gink that has to name this batch Its pronounced Bos-por-rus, of nk! And then and thére, the students claim, Pacific ocean j accent on the first syllable. = m It means—a strait or narrow 1 Tt content with giving names, he filed his Spanish sover. between two seas or between a eign’s claims. He talé aside his coat of tin, took off his shoes and and a lake. Generally it is used in| ns . ; he sald, “The lands that touch this main belong to great reference to the Strait of Constan. of Spain!” Unople, called “Boghaz” by the | But time went on; from far and near anothef people settled here; | Turks, connecting the Black and no longer, now, the hand of Spain controls Pacific's broad domain |) Marmora Seas, but has not neces on virile immigration’s floods his Castile’s hope was turned to || sarily this sole significance. i suds! | It comes from—Latin “Bosporus! But much ts life! For that, you know, ts just the way that most || with the same mea Eng. |] . things wo. To get a job ts jx art—to hold it, that’s the hardest tabs i, es an part! For nearly always, 1 we hold alone what we dewerve It's used Uke this: “The world's) leyes today are fixed on the ; | port as the principal point of - | ternational danger.” ioe {A variation of the spelling | “Bosphorus.”) on c * k . ch tui ' t to } ai ' ‘When you buy gasoline, you are buying power. i | How much power you get out of a gallon of fuel 3 } depends, first, upon the number of heat units it q ty contains, and second, upon how completely these eu heat units are converted into power. th | Automotive engineers will tell you that the ideal é., | motor fuel is the one which contains the maxi- 2 mum number of heat units that can be vaporized . , rapidly and uniformly in the carburetor, and con- sumed completely in the cylinders of the engina, sl e Red Crown conforms to this definition i CUASOIINE — a swatiey—1005. * It vaporizes readily and uniformly—that | completely consumed in the cylinders — that means greater power and mileage at less cost. ‘i Fill at the Red Crown sign—at Service Stationa, i garages, or other dealers, Ia te d rd ‘Theater —__|

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