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The Seattle Star btiehing Oe Phene Mate 0706 Hew. Se De Tee ae nen ag Se, mah, Se Gty, Be per month: § menths ) pear, 86 ne the mate of ‘eshington, Outside montha er $9.00 per rear. a Gilman, Nicoll & Rathman, specta fee, Mon ey Sue gooey Trivone bidgt New York effies, Danadian Pacific bidg.; Boston office, Tremont bide. The “Here, Boy!” Attitude Around factories, offices, stores, yes, and newspaper Jants, a fact frequently noticed by visitors is the “hard- iled” attitude of grown-ups toward the boys who are on the payroll. The boss usually is salaamed to and toadied to as it he were a sacred cow. Miss Pansy Plush, the beautiful typist, gets a lot of fawning consideration, And even the male grown-ups treat each other with a mutual deference or respect, despite a considerable amount of facetious ing. But when it comes to the boy who works around the place—well, when he's called and commanded, it gener- ally sounds as if he were a trained dog that had to be handled roughly on the theory that, give him an inch, he'll take a mile. Rough treatment, lack of consideration, and a stern re- buke are difficult for a grown-up to “swallow —despite the callouses accumulated by the sensibilities during years of toil and contact with the hostile pack that are trying to the same dollar we're after ourselves, e boy, fresh from home and just striking out for himself, has none of these callouses. His nature is sen- Sitive, without insulation. And making him the target of the unnecessary sharp word or lack of consideration {s about the lowest-down act that the so-called cee being ity of. a A you remember, years ago, the heartaches and Spiritual injuries and disappointments that were yours ‘when you first began making your own living. If we all kept this memory fresh before us, the boys who work today would get a better deal. Considering the harsh and thoughtless treatment that ' most boys get on their first jobs, it’s no wonder that so many of them grow up brutal, cynical and defiant toward their fellows. s You can tell how much of real manhood there {is in a £ -up, by the way he treats the boys who work around in And you can spot the bully, roughing the lads in a he’d not have the courage to try on men his own size. ther thing: These boys now working with us, and making mistakes due to inexperience (as we all did in our turn), are the future leaders of the world. For all some ' of us know, our only claim to greatness may be in having Worked with some great man of the future, now a boy Mervously fumbling at his first job. _ A certain baggageman didn’t realize this years ago when he permanently injured a train-boy’s hearing by boxing him on the ears for cluttering up the baggage car electrical apparatus. The train-boy was Thomas A. BOLL WEEVIL _ As the chief entomologist said to me this morning, it (boll weevil) ts menace, and we have | mechanical people, made in factories, who can do all people do. They take the place of all i triumphs, there is no way to keep ve thru utilizing the substance of this now growing crops, rearing animals, vd metals, and Sarieditic, wculreatees That is the only way. even tho we actually had chemistry, or “R. U. themselves would have to come out Under such a system, there would be no question but Call the new. process magic for want nobody could produce even by magic, land. Given any bit of the earth’s sur- use his powers, and the magician could he needed. rive him of the use of he would starve with rest of the landless. The struggle in a “R. U. R.” world would be between landholders and the landless. It could not be other- We have actually had such struggles. Slaves are |. R.’s,” save that they have to be fed and sheltered. ism of free men to slavery lies in the fact that the slave not only enriches his master but injures the man. RECLAMATION ‘The Yakima project in Washington is a fair example of what reclama- fion has accomplished. This project is about 10 years old. The city of the project, contains a population of nearly the irrigated land are tributary to the city, the nt almost entirely upon the products of the soil, with the exception of ene lumber mill—Representative Smith F i i Fy i The President and the Subsidy Senator Borah, with an ear to the ground, warns Pres!- dent Harding that insisting upon enactment of the Lasker ship subsidy bill will be simply “a second attempt at party suicide.” atdaat cones Newberry egninet’ vate opinion 20d jose New! against public opinion an achieved almost a dicsenet political suicide. Mr. Harding’s hold on public opinion thruout the land fs weakened. Now again, he must choose between public ge ge a pet political scheme, the Lasker subsidy latter. @ apparently is committed irrevocably to the It’s safe to say the elections showed a marked reaction against reac fenarics. In Other Words, Common Sense Glenn Frank, editor of Century magazine, says he no- _ ces three distinct classes of people—pessimists, opti- _ mists and rationalists. _ The future hinges on the rationalists, Frank thinks. There is such a thing as too much optimism, the same as too much pessimism. The happy medium is rational- ism, or common sense. In the long run it prevails—but usually after the mischief is done and “It’s too late.” Reports of Senator Lodge's election are conflicting. Some say he won by & whisker and others insist he got in by @ close shave. The wets want beer brought back on the bler of the Volstead act. If the country’s going te be run by biccs, why not « public bloc? THE “ABOUT READY TO LET GO? SEATTLE STAR Tat he a PARTY. Suici COMPENSATION Together we had walked the highest hill, We did not care at all that the way was steep; Together we had kept our faith until We came unto « valley, eweet and deep For every Ml there ts @ valley low, For every pain there ta a foy to be, For every silence there are songs that blow Like green wummer winds across a lea T walked again up the highest bill, The way was long, but I tried to keap The faith that we had held until The valley would coma, so wweet, so deep. For every MU there te a valley low, For every pain there is a joy to be, For every dlence there are songs that Blew Tike green wummer winds eoross a lea 1 whiked again the tender valley ways Where brave young trees and tall, cool grass are grown; But with me walked a ghost of yesterdays; I could not bear to come this way alona For every Mil there te « ealley tow, For every pain there te © joy to be, For every vanished thing « dreem may ga, Tike my dream come to comfort ma. LETTER FROM \V RIDGE MANN Dear Folks: Our house contains @ furnace, and ft eats @ let of coal; to want to burn us out of all cur meager roll They onli ® heater, but I truthfully affirm “an ammunfttoneater” te really proper term. When nights are getting chilly, I go down and feed shovel till I'm etily filling up the blooming hole. And when arm is weary I can hear the furnace roar—dts tone te cheery aa it gaily hollers, “Morer I watch its red distentions, and can pieture In my eye the place where good intentions pave the strests of breand-bye But atill, with all its roaring, this t# all ft seems to do—it takes the heat {t's storing and it shoots tt up the flue I made the observation to the wife the other night, “For quick incineration, the contraption’s working right. But when it comes to heating, anybody—eage or fool—can hear the thing repeating, ‘Don’t get furried, folke—KEEP COOL’™ ‘The wife replied with meaning, “Here's another fact that's true ~the furnace needs « cleaning, and the job is up to youl Bo fo t# full of sorrow, for I daren't dodge or shirk; Il do the job tomorrow—that's the @my I like to work! | Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blow-| ness, sneezing. The second and third | dows usually break up the cold | completely and end ali grippe misery. | “Pape's Cold Cofnpound” ts the| quickest, surest relief known and! costa only # few cents at drug stores. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. ing and enuffling! Take “Pape's Cold Compound” every two hours until three doses are taken. The first dose opens clogged-up nostrils and alr pas- sages of head; stops nose running; relieves headache, dullness, feverieh- | Ineist upon Pape'’s. The Best Modern Practice and the Practical Common Sense of the matter both unite in Demanding the Protection of TITLE INSURANCE. Whenever You Buy Real Estate, or Lend on the Security of Real Estate. Title Insurance 18 ISSUED BY Washington Title Insurance Company “Under State Supervision” Assets More Than $675,000 DR. J. KR. BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.60 GLasses ON BPARTH We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwost that really grind lenses from start to finish, | and we are the only one in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVE. Examination free by. graduate op- tometriat. Glasses not preseribed unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVL 4 SCIENCE Whites Lose Teeth. Lack .f Magnesium. Vitamines Studied. Scientists Experiment. HAVE been watching the re- ‘The Intest research seema close sulte of constipation for 47 to solving one of the great science years, since I began the prao- puzzles of modern days. tice of medicine back in 1875, I Civilization with all that tt has cathy lg wad ce, Sad Come taught about how to live has given fession makes some wustealy interesting experiments and tests, the fundamentals of causes and relief in this particular ailment aro unchanged. us decayed teeth. Bequimaux and Maoris have kept their good teeth on their rough fare while Anglo Saxons in all climes are losing them. Dr, Perey Howe of Marvard unt versity, working on guinea pigs and monkeys, has dincovered that tooth But the people take greater in- terest today in their health, in diet, exercise and the drinking of water, Constipation, however, will cour from tim i ime no matter decay is due to the increase of mag. np tga dieadtn 9 Nagy ~ poco nesium in the teeth tn proportion | importance, th how to treat to the amount of lime it when it comes. I believe in ‘This ts due to the tact that when getting as close to nature as certain of the newly dinoovered vit my remedy for amines are absent in the diet the constipation, kt eo Dr. Cald- teeth dail to take up the lime from | well's Syrup Pepsin, ie a mild the food. Orange juloe added to al vegetable compound, It is made cooked diet cured the conditions tn of Fayptian senna and pepeia with agreeable aromatics, Chil- dren will not willingly take bitter things. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant- tasting, and youngsters love it, It does not gripe, Thousands of mothers have written me to that effect. Over 10 million bottles of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin are now wold every year, and it is the most widely bought family laxative in the world. I say family laxative because all in the family can use | it with safety. It is mild enough for the infant in armas, effective in the most jo constipation the teeth of the animals caused by the faulty diet. Cataract and arthrt tin also are caused by the same deficiency in the diet. New Wrinkle in Smuggling Not only have the Dempsey Carpentier pletures been ex hibited, but they have brought out the filme of the negro, Jack Jobnaon’s fight with Wil lard tn Havana, which have been lying tn some scrap heap thru the Wileon adminivtra. toa. Just before those brutal TAKE DR. fight films came from Cuba to New York we secured this Rodenberg act. The attention of the officers of the depart- catowes9Y RUP PEPSIN -« Jhe family laxative FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1922, . © What I Have Learned in 47 Years Practice of an adult. The formula ts on every packnge. Recent! wave of drastic physics, Calomel, mercurial that salivates and loosens teeth, has been revived; salt’ waters ‘and powders that draw needed constituents from the blood; coal tar disguised in candy form that causes kin erup- tions, In a practice of 47 years I have never seen any reason for their use when a medicine like Syrup Pepsin will empty the bow ole just as promptly, more cleanly and gently, without griping, and without shock to the system. there hes been a new © Keep free from constipation! It lowers your strength 28 per cent, hardens the arteries and brings on premature old age. Do not let a day go by without a bowel move- ment. Do not sit and hope but go to a druggist and get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is @ generous-size bottle. Take @ teaspoonful that my and by morning you will be well. The coat is only about a cent a dose, Use Syrup P for yourself and mem- bers of the family in constipation, biliousness, sour and crampy stom- ach, piles, indigestion, loss of a tite or sleep, and to bresk up fevers and colds. Always have a bottle in the house, and observe these three rules of health: Keep the head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. 4-0, Qtartte. md Prom @ recent portrait ef DR. W. B. CALDWELD) Born Shelbyville, Mo, 1638 $10,000 worth of trial bottles of Syrup Pepsin free Last year I agreed to spend $10,000 "cash for free samples of I, Sod pare wall to alk whe bd lo @ chek A Gomeodecs moll wa to result, But there mus be many tho did not write. 1 would like to get their address this time. So I pew renee my afer, in remem be pproaching Bi Sidkder” and sil again” deote 410,008" to free samples. jam anaious to see ona in esery Ameri- Write for yours today. “a ment of Justice was called to it, || er ¥; % and they prevented the landing of the films on our coast The || Death Dealt to owners went into Canada and by i photographed them scrons the Rats Firemen Canadian border on a ray of MAYBOLE, Bng., Nov. 24—As a light—Rev, Wilbur F. Crafts, wupertntendent — International reform bureau, testifying be fore congreasional committes, exterminate them. Thousands of the rodents were drowned by the fire hone. NEW DOORS, of exceptional beauty, quality and value, just added to the big line of Stetson & Post— TOCK MILLWORK FOR ALL TYPES OF HOMES We have added to our stock of millwork, the one and two panel three-ply veneer doors which are here illustrated. Our line of stock millwork is of such design that. it can be used in houses of any. style. We Save You 15% to 25% We sell direct from forest to you —eliminating all middle profits! WHAT MILLWORK MEANS WINDOWS—WINDOW FRAMES AND FINISH. DOORS—INSIDE AND OUTSIDE. DOOR FRAMES AND FINISH. .- CUPBOARD DOORS, FLOUR BINS, DRAWERS, BREAKFAST NOOKS, MEDICINE CABINETS, IRONING BOARD CABINETS, DRAIN BOARDS. For more than forty-eight years we have been manu- facturing millwork — and from experience we have learned that the homebuilder needs millwork that can be ordered one day and delivered the next. $10,000. \ Ten-Grain Capsule last resort to combat a plague of rate|is contained in @ 10-grain capsule, in the slaughterhouse district the! used | fire department was called out to | ders. of Dr chief engineor for Thomas A. Edi- non, in New York. Therefore, we are specializing in the manufacture of very high-grade stock millwork for homes costing from $1,000 to GET OUR “STOCK MILLWORK” CATALOG Selling of Blood : Now a Profession A Dew competitive “profession” has sprung up in New York. The members sell a pint of their blood for $26 to be used by physicians tp blood transfusions. One hospital has 60 of these blood transfusionists op & ite staff, 5 Contains Radio Set The smallest radio set in the world ordinartly for medicinal pow- It ts on display tn the offices Miller R. Hutchinson, former It is manufactured in very large quantities from the very best quality of old growth yellow fir. Perfectly machined, and as strong and durable as millwork can be made. All flat surfaces are sanded. 'STETSON & POST LUMBER Ci SAC JO WH TCOM AVE VE. SEATTLE