The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 27, 1922, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

The Seattle Star Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co Phone Main 0600 News. Paper Enterprise Association and United Preas Srevien. By mail, ot sity, 800 tate of T. R. __ The time that has lapsed since the death of Theodore Roosevelt is too brief to furnish the perspective neces- - gary in determining the real position that he will hold in our permanent history. _ As president his most far-reaching public service was the “trust-busting” movement he fathered to demon- strate that the people of the United States, thru their gov- " ernment, are more powerful than any possible combina- tion of dollars or individuals, The demonstration is not “yet complete. ‘ As Roosevelt Memorial day rolls round this year, how- ever, T. R. the man looms above T. R. the politician, That is as he would have preferred it. With. a virility and explosive nervous energy that made him the typical American, T. R. at the height of his in- 4 had the greatest popular following of any presi- it except Jackson and Jefferson. ~ As a personality he looms monumentally, and his in- -Muence still is exerting itself in America on a scale per- haps greater than even his most ardent enthusiast would The life and career of T. R. demonstrated that per- sonality is the most powerful of all human forces. “Miners use elther forks or shovels.”—Headline. They need one of these etiquette books. Now is the time for father to paste on bis wallet, “Not to be opened before Christmas,” Fashion note: Coal dealers are wearing diamonds, Vote “Yes” on 30-10 Altho it is one of the most widely-discussed of all the es which will come up at the election next month, so-called 30-10 plan is probably not understood with y degree of certainty by more than one out of twenty _ The reason for this is that “Initiative Measure No. 46”—as it will appear on the ballot—is so densely ced in legal verbiage that no one but a corporation rr would ever be able to digest it. _ The plan is, however, quite simple. Under existing laws, the state contributes $20 a year d the schooling of each child, the county and dis- contributing the rest. Under the 30-10 plan the would contribute $30 a year instead of $20. ponents of the plan claim that this would increase pol expenses, but there seems to be little basis for t. There is nothing in the measure to the schools spend more money; all it would do d be to place education costs on a more equitable it is, the measure would simply make the state con- more, and the county and district less—thus it possible for children in the poorer and less sections to get a better education than they now. in view of all this, The Star’s advice is to vote “Yes” | Initiative Measure No. 46. pute and go parking. Steam From Electricity have acquired the habit of calling water power Coal.” We spoke more wisely than we knew. Two pulp companies save 400 tons of coal a day in ince of Quebec by the use of electricity from ‘dro-electric plants for the purpose—astonish- steam! This is really with pb en lernar ae as calling imperatively for hydo-electricity as a steam purposes—yet. One thing it do; it will use, if utilized, the electricity of the so- ‘off-peak hours” in making steam. These are the the ordinary electric plant is partly or wholly idle. Steam thus generated would use the “White Coal” Which otherwise would flow away wasted. A Quebec statesman the other day spoke in favor of exporting electricity. She has some 7,000,000 horse- j undeveloped. The Quebec hydro-electric plants in and to be developed, are within transmitting of New England. And New England has no coal. We use electricity for cooking; sometimes for heating. ‘Wonder if this electric steam generator can be used to te steam for heating purposes? No doubt it can. so, with New England’s own water power developed— and she has lots of it—and with Quebec exporting it, every house might have steam heat while the owner s at the hard-coal profiteers. * jut, of course, some statesmen of the McCumber and Fordney school, would put a tariff on electricity. Ought not our infant hard-coal and hydro-electric industries to protected? And if they oughtn’t, that’s no reason why won't be. But electricity from steam is an interest- topic, tariff or no tariff. .*< Chicago mediums are delivering spirt messages, all of which seem ‘The Turks’ , putting them two days ahead of a ary se oe itera 7 wo days | ‘The dollars that run the government also run the taxpayers. ROSES FOR YOUR HOME Fall planting of your roses for next summer should be done as foon as the leaves have fallen from trees and bushes. The Star's Washington bureau has compiled for you from official sources everything you need to know in order to have a beautiful rose warden, rose hedge, or lawn and border of roses for next summer. It tells what species and varieties to select, all about soll and fertilizer, planting, pruning, roses for arbor and trellis, roses for cutting, cultivation, and eo on. Whether you have one rose bush or fifty, this bulletin will be of value to you. And whether you | want to plant now or next spring, you should send for this bul. — which %& free to Star readers, Fill out carefully the coupon yw } Washington Bureau, Seattle Star, 1322 N. Y. Ave., Washington, D. ©. 0 oli a el tad ae bulletin ROSES FOR THE HOME, ith four cents in stamps to ee Pans al at ps cover postage STREET and NO. | cold, has colic, or If the stomach is| Ma The football season's under way-—T Ike to go and watch them play; I like to see the pigskin roll, and see them plunge or kick @ foal) or watch them tackle, run or fall, or make @ punt or catch the ball, There's quite a lot of things to see that alwayn make a hit with me; and oftentimes T ike to dream that I was playing on the team, beomuse, of all the games there are, I'd rather be a football star. But out of all the jobs they've got, would I be center? I would not! For, often, when [ sit and view the things the center has to do, I always think [t's plain to see the center's job is not for me. It weoma to me the center plays the hardest part in many wayn no matter who may have the ball, he marks the spot on which they fall; he never gets a chance to score—he gets the bumps, but nothing more, While other players make the plays that get the rootern’ cheering he holds the hard and cheerlems Job of keystone guy for mob-—it takes a big, unselfish heart for one to play the ® part! So he's a guy that I acclaim, in iffe or In a football game—the steady bird who carries thru the thankless jobs he has to do, and bravely tries to do hin best to let his efforts help the rest. Urges Passage of Referendum 13 Editor The Star; by the only method that ts practwad A pamphlet concerning referendum | This same pamphlet states that 13, put out by the Public Health| “this bill t* sponsored by a group of League, purports to be mont altruls:| persons who deny the existence of tio. Statements made in that pamph: | disease.” The fact is that many let are misleading. thousands who believe in all hygienic Why ts the clause referring to con-|and sanitary measures, who realize tagious and infectious diseases omit-|the danger of germs and are anxious ted? The law specifically states,/to have rigid quarantine enforced, “Whenever such practicing physician | wherever necessary, favor this bill. or graduate nurse shall in good falth| The present law makes the method have a reason to believe that such |of treatment optional with the par child uttering from a contagious ent. May it never be otherwise, but or infectious disease, such child may |if the very group who secured sign- be examined for such contagious or/ers for this referendum under false infected, shall be sent home and | pretenses, had not met with oppost- infecteod, shall be sent home and ition in Olympia at the last legisla such parent or guardian shall be no-/ ture, even now the people would be tified of the reason therefor, and |asked to give their children over not then such child shall not be permit-jonly to examination, but treatment. ted to return to school until the|controlied absolutely by the state, school authorities are satiafied that | subject to one school of medicine. such child ta not suffertng from such | dominated by one school, The ma- contagious or infectious disease.” | chine te working subtly, none the Children have germs in their ays | lens surely, tema before any sign of disease is| Referendum 18 stands for th present, before even the most compe: | rights of the people as against ex. tent doctor could tell that the child | ploitation by the medical association. is going to be tll, much less name the) Vote YES on referendum 13 if you dixease, Since any child may be ex-| wish protection, but not to bow down amined whenever such child shows /to the dictates of the American symptoms of any contagious or in-| Medical Association. fectioug disease and may be sent A LICENSED OSTEOPATHIC home, protection is furnished to all PHYSICIAN. A Farmer’s View of the Hunters Editor The Star: the bird lay until starvation put an In your lswue of Oct. 14th, two of end to ite wuffering. Upon remon- your correspondents take one L. M.| trating with them on such crusitien, Clarke to task for his humane views |they grew indignant and tried to make on birdhunting. Hurrah! for Mr,|Us believe they had perfect right to Clarke, and may his tribe prosper! Kill and ertpple all that happened to and increase! We have now seen the | Come within range, being that they hunter's side of It, and the humant-| head been Instrumental tn having the tarian's aide of it, and here goes for | birds planted here and they had paid the farmer's side of it. pore a ole sae they were 1 [given to understand that we farm- fea beget bg vane Bag S wesreve: ers had been feeding thern our «rain tion and @ nuisance to the farmers, it and therefore, intended to have some- is this so-chlied “sportamen” running |‘!M# to say in the matter, at large during hunting season,| Another self-styled sportaman, Mr. breaking down fences, opening gates| Atkins, ts holding up Roosevelt as and peppering the farmer's stock |#” example to be followed by the ris- with birdshot, disregarding all the |'"# seneration and there we agree “No Hunting” signs one may set up. with him, for Mr. Roosevelt did not content himself with going into a One correspondent asked Mr. Clarke! farmer's backyard killing or maim- LETTER V RIDGE Dear Folks: if he hae ever tramped thru the |ing birds that are almost as tame as} weeds and brush and windfalls over! the farmer's chickens No, he went his head for eight or ten hours, com-| hunting where there was some risk ing home tired and empty-handed. \to be taken and some dangers to be Now the writer asks Mr. Monroe If | encountered. he has ever gone thru the same per-| 1 ume Mr. Atkina will nay this P formance with an eight or ten-footiis written by an agerelved crank.| crosscut maw and doubles bitted ax, re- Wheing the same jogs and brush to merchantable wood and lumber, pre- partory to clearing the land so that he could rains wheat he needed, with- out making a nulsance of himself. The writer had cecaston to tnter- cept a couple of “sportamen™ recent- May be so, but I will have the natis- faction of knowing that I have plen- ty of company to which fact the nu- merous “No Hunting” signs displayed along the highways will testify, and if Mr. Atkine’ sole object In hunting birds ts to be In the woods why then not take himself up in the foothills ly who had shot the legs off a Chi-| where he would not be a menace to nese pheasant, but he flew away and people that do not desire anything they were unable to find it In «pite| better than be at peace with all na- of the fact that they had the “valu-| ture? able assistance” of two “highly bred” setters, and consequently had to let J. A. MAGNTSON, Enumclaw. Says Harvey [ Disgraces Mother Editor The Star: ; Wandering Boy Tonight?’ Mr. Har. In your issue of October 24 Mr. | vey certainly makes a “jack” of him Harvey, U. 8. ambassador in Eng-|seif, for the word “noul” does not land, is reported as saying “that If /appear in the Ten Commandments, women have souls there is no evi jeven in connection with man. Then dence of it in the Bible” and the |again, there ts fore in the Bible than | Ten Commandments apply only to/|the Decalogue, In Gen. IIL, where God ts speaking |to the woman alone, she is addressed hse “thou,” and in the Fourth Com- mandment work tn prohitited to both Well may his mother join the countless throng of heavy-hearted mothers in singing “Where Is My Don’t let child stay bilious, constipated MOTHER, YOUR CHILD'S BOWELS NEED “CALIFORNIA Fl SYRUP” Even Cross, Feverish, Sick Children Love its Taste and it Never Fails to Empty Little Bowels If your child is listless, full of) Millions of mothers keep “Califor. Syrup” handy. They know MO 4eereeseeesereeedesseesesecessovescoeces |wour, breath bad, tongue coated, a|® teaspoonful today may save a sick teaspoonful of “California Fig Syr-| child tomorrow, It never cramps oF et : up” will quickly start lver and|veracts, Ask your druggist for pane Gare tae |bowel action. In @ few hours you|#enuine “California Fig Syrup” lean see for yourself how thor-| Which has directions for babies and STATE. 000s ee ese sensecsscereccscesescsercees oughly it works the constipation] Children of all ages printed on bot- |polson, sour bile and waste right|tle. = Mother! You must say ‘out and you have a well, playful| “California” or you may get an child again, imitation fig syrup, THE SEATTLE ROOSEVELT BY BERTON BRALEY 1 looked at life as a game to play, With all of his glorious est, And he played it manfully, day by day, While the heart beat high in his breast, He never whined when the play wan spilled, Or the surging ine thrown back, But ever anew his soul was thrilled As he leaped to a fresh attack! B loved the sun and the good brown earth, And horres and dog nd men, And Joyous labor and brave clean mirth, And ever and ever again He'd turn with a smile from the cares of state To romp with his kids a span; A bully Father, » knightly Mate, And @ yard wide, ail-wool Man! ND tho he stood with his feet on the ground, Mis eyen were not blind to stare, He fought for the visions his soul had found, Nor winced at hin battlescars, In the hearts of men t# his monument, Tho Greatheart himself ts gone, Who lived his life to the top of his bent, And died with his har: on! j (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service) son and daughter, froup, and his attempt to prove that Harvey read the Com.|his mother hax no soul is rather wf Mr. mandmenta carefully he would read a Harvey might to's relative of Darwin jone Uke this: “Honor thy father and! ‘the people of the United States |thy mother.” If the women were in| who conferred the honor of am. noed of a wt of Commandments, they | bassadorship on Mr, Harvey will be would certainly want them to come | reminded of the proverb of Solomon from someone who was above mak-|"As he that bindeth a stone in a jing “Jest” of a thing so sacred as the | sling, so is he that giveth honor to a hallowed honor of our mothers. | fool.” At any rate, the women of the Mr. Harvey dors not seem to be | United States will well recall another aware thatethe Bible tells us that: | proverb which seems to fit this oo |"Eight souls were saved tn the ark,” | canton: Noah, bis wife, thelr three sons and| “A wise son maketh a glad father, their wives |but @ foolish son in the heavin of Hin rejection of the “rib story" | his mother.” Shame on Ambassador would lead one to think that his an-| Harvey, P. A. KLEIN, cestors were not included tn that| Pastor, Dunlap Baptist Church. Takes Issue With Evening P. a rome SN crak ‘Weinic mean to your child?’ This ts what it onday, Octo! . « s és nownpe cer carrion @ leading editorial | "00" 10 Baayen peasy b yep on Referendum 13 that I can hardly | tne gchoolroom and. , ees oo tar beliews i Inspired by @ careful Per | there is not pees sel bs vg een ural of Senate Bill 180 on which the | so0¢h eal slpestiiendleas oqe.d \Senietambeion ie akecoiks Geath-dealing serums or pus running | He statem: “It provides that parents ne sateaseh tei ia ye ig calf be- ‘may forbid the physical examination his blood. of their children.” which is the}. YOUF child starts out in tife with |truth, but not the whole truth. It is|th* pure blood formed in the 4 favorite pastime of mpecial inter: |!boratory of Nature circulating jente to resort to half truths which |*#ru his arteries. No one has a are an misleading as actual un-| ht to dofile it with amalipox mat- ter taken from the wore of a human truths, | In addition to the above truth the /!*Ine and passed thru the monkey, and the calf, and finally brought vel doum deanna ules cian or | (MARRIAGE |A LA MODE | graduate nurse shall in good faith An old Assyrinn marringe cus. jbave reason to belleve that such child is suffering from a contagious tom is based upon sound paychol- ony. All the girls of marringe. or jnfectious dineare, much child may be“examined for such contagious or able age are assembled in one place and auctioned off. infectious disease and tf found so tn The money which the hand. fected shall be sent home and such | parent or guardian shall be notified | some girle bring in ts bestowed upon the plain ones as a mar. jot the reason therefor, and then such child shall not be permitted to/ riage portion, giving them an added matrimonial valua jreturn to school until the schoo! au: | In thie way all giris, no mat- |thoritios are gatiafied that much child ter how unprepossessing as to lim not muffering from #uch con-| tagious or infectious disease.” | appearance, are provided with husbands. This leaves the way open for all that possibly can be done to prevent | the spread of contagious discase tn | |the schools, tut the special interests | jo not want it to stop there. They want the right to go into the schools ) with their innocent narcotics (7, beneficent poisons (7, immunizing serums (7) that kill or leave organic Giseane in their wake. | These special interests are the manufacturers of serums and vac: | cines, probably spending milifons all over the United States to accomplish | this end, and holding out rich re wards to any organization that can! help them, and these rewards being grabbed at by the League for the Conservation of Health. j i aetieeeees Main 6720 : = = “The Store of Eternal Newness” SCIENCE Medicine in Infancy. Guess Work for Ages. Change Came in 1849. Magendie Was Pioneer. Formerly there were schools of medicine; that is, there were def. inite ideas promulgated by teachers which differed just ae the are schools of painting. As medicine wae in those dayn a matter of opinion just as litera ture or painting, #0 each teacher had a right to teach his particular views, Cullen and Brown and fam Hahnemann represented heavy dow ing with @rugs and free bleeding and excessively minute donee re spectively. They all had @ feeble portion of the truth and have all passed with their schools, Modern medicine has no place for schools or creeds in its ranks, Tho first dose of medicine to be given scientifically was in 1849, when Dr. Magendie first adminis» tered a dose of strychnia, knowing just where it was going and what part of the spinal cord it was going to effect. Since that time all em- pirie or guew medicine hag given way to that proved by experiments mostly performed on animals. back to be injected ineo the blood of your healthy child in an attempt to immunize bim from «@ @isease that few people in thie country hav ‘The paper mentions some diseases the child is Mable to contract, such as diphtheria, scarlet fever, infantile | parnlysis, smallpox, whooping cough No one well informed on the symptematology of these or kindred Gineases would venture to make such a statement, for the premont- tory symptoms of these diseases are all the same, and if there is @ nurse or doctor in existence who can tell what disease the symptoms will de. velop into, from two to five days before the symptoms are indicative of any dimnanse other than a cold, let she or he step forward F. W. WINTER, D. 0. Farm Problem Reaches Crisis Editor The Star: I noticed in your publication of October 19 you had an editorial per- tainigg to hogs and beef cattie—why the farmer does not raise them when the whole country is #0 short of them. These are some reasons: First, these so-called agents figure it all out on paper for you, but it never works out that way, but this in the way it works out: You go out and buy 100 ehoats at feeder prices, which are $12 and $14 per ewt. Then you feed them for three or four monthe and turn them on the market. You get $4 to $7 per cwt How much have you made for your labor and the grain you work to raise all summer? You get leas than nothing. ‘Tis not alone this way with the hog market, but with every. thing you raise. They allow the railroad company to get all the profit on everything a man raises, and if there is anything left the MeDougall-/outhwick. Shopping Hours 9:00 to 5:30 es = 3 DR, J. BR. BINYON Free Examination Best $2.50 GLASSES on Earth of the few optics! stores in th 6 that really grind lense to finish, and we are the one in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE, Examination froe by graduate op- tometrist. Glessse not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVE. ‘We are on middleman gets that. The farmer works 16 to 18 hours per day all summer an4 gets noth- tng for his labor. In my own per. sonal case I grew @ large acreage of sweet corn. I shipped to Seattle, firat two shipments. I did pretty fair—about 15 cents per dozen clear —but on the third shipment I got a bill back that I owed 30 cents charges. The farmer was the very first to be struck by this reconstruction, and is being struck every day the same way. What we want, and need, is action in place of promises, Look at the fruit question this year, The fruitgrower cannot even get an offer on his crop of any kind ‘There must be something done, an4 no more “hot air” nor prom- ines, or the farm and farmer must quit. He cannot get by this way anoth- In my district alone this going to walk out and leave every. thing, and dozen# have already Gone so. High taxes and high water rentals and no money for what they raise have put them “on the bum.” They must find employment some | where to live. This farm problem is no mere thing to play with, but ie & real issue, and must be met and dealt with wisely. Otherwise country will be ruined forever. But all you can hear is promises and a lot of advice, which Is of no value whatever to the farmer fruit ‘The paper aske “What does it IF YOU ARE WELL BRED You do not Invite guests to formal functions before you have called upon them, A young woman or an unmar- ried woman watts for an invita- tion to call from a matron or older woman, A girl does not invite a man to call at her home until she has met him several times and is quite sure he would care to call Two Note Papers Merge in England NEWCASTLE, Eng., Oct, 27.—The |Neweastie Chronicle, founded in |1764, has amalgamated with the |North Mail Duchess Dodges a Political Job EDINBURGH, Oct. 27.~-The duch- jean of Atholl has declined to become @ candidate for parliament. ‘ ' In ativer or gold backgrounds for Wint French Velour Special $2.35 In invisible and broken chaoks of navy and brown, Sorrento and tan, black and gray, garne’ brown and gray, Sport Bloomers $3.95 Of Jersey and Milanese, fin- ished at knee with pleated cuff or garter, in all the popular colors, Howard E. Coffin, an ex- ecutive official of a large mo- tor concern, will direct the National Aeronautical asso-} ciation in its work of uniting | all aviation societies for bet-| ter flying conditions, stricter inspections, and similar pro- gressive measures, Coffin was elected presi- dent at the association's na- tional convention in Detroit, A medium weight sult, well finish: Why Not Make a Hat? interwoven in novelty effects, these make very pretty turbans. A wide variety of shades and designs to select from. For after. noon or evening wear, these are just the thing. —MacDougall-Southwick, Street Floor Handsome Fabrics Very popular for dresses, wraps or sults, and in the wanted shades of taupe, navy, midnight blue, Sorrento and Delft. 48 inches wide. Velour Coating 58 Inches wide, —MacDougall-Southwick, Street Floor, Union Suits $1.00 lock seams. A well-wearing and comfortable suit. Pi ' ‘With just 24% yards of Brocaded Ribbon, one can make very easily one of these charming new cha- peaux, and for such a slight cost, too, $5.63 $2.50 a Yard with bright contrasting shades er Coats Melton Velour $2.45 A lovely rich fabric, tn brown and navy, 68 inches wide, in combinations a gray, brown t and gray and | $2.95 Women’s Underwear Phoenix Vests $1.95 Fiber and Silk Vesta, made talon ag shoulder strap. priced $2.35. Richelieu ribbed n pink, white and orchid. — effect, priced $2.60, Sizes 88 to 44. re ie : att Low, high and Dutch necks; sleeveless, long ed and with flat and elbow length; knee and ankle length, MacDougall Southwick, Third Floor Hosiery Phoenix Silk Hose $1.95 Full-fashioned, with lisle gar ter top, reinforced foot, in black, white, otter, gunmetal, fawn, navy, taupe, polo, steel, dark beige and havana, Sizes 8% to 10, Phoenix Silk Hose $1:55 Sem! - fashioned, Reinforced foot, hem and ribbed tops. Colors black, white, navy, taupe, polo, steel, beige and havgna, Sizes 8% to 10, MacDougall. Southwick Special $1.15 Semifashioned, with eight- inch lisle garter top, reinforo ed foot. In black, African, navy and beige, Sizes 8% to 10. —MacDougal!-Southwick Street Fiogr. A New Perky Bow oan be effectively made of Motre ribbon with satin stripes and edges. A variety of desir- able shades that are suitable for sashes, millinery trimming, or hair bows. A very good quality; 7 Inches wide, priced a yard 650, —MacDougall-Southwick, Street Floor. All the Latest Magazines on Sale —Street Floor $2.35 and $2.50 Pure Sik Vests, with adjust. able shoulder strap; tn pink, white and orchid. Plain weave,

Other pages from this issue: