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PAGE 8 fHE SEATTLE STAR ATURI v4 t — - ” eens are ay - _ omens Seana - — = 5 eres 2 aa pai 3 qn = = 4 ———— P| SO LIVE THAT WHEN YOU DIE THE LOSS WILL NOT BE COVERED BY INSURANCE q The Seattle Star |'- stl San Francisce New Tork offices, Reprenentat office, Tribune Hidg t Bids The Pace Libel Suit! { f IS the constant aim of The Star in its business of x ] collect and pri news to be entirely fair and 2 just to the persons concerned in news happenings j Whenever The Star makes a: mistake it is not only happy, but it is eager to correct that mistake F It is natural that a newspaper will make many mis- r¢ takes, but Star readers must know that this newspaper makes every possible effort to get the facts and then to a print the facts rly and accurately, a Just as The Star considers it a duty to correct an un- a intentional error, so does it consider it a duty to stand . Pe firm when any attempt is made to bluff it as a news- ae paper into suppression of the news. i Some months ago ex-Warden Pace of the Walla Walla penitentiary brought a libel suit against The Star on ac- count of the publication of a news article. Recently in the superior court, attorneys for Pace voluntarily dismissed the-ease. Incidentally, other Seattle newspapers printed columns about the case when it was filed. They gloated over it When it was dismissed at the request of the plaintiffs, one paper failed even to mention it; two others printed small, obseure notices that required diligent search to find, One Way to Get Them! HIS is just a suggestion to the managers of the Northwest Merchants’ Exposition, who are busy now | getting plans under way for the next big show, to be held here the first week in August: You are casting about: for ways and means to attract people to Seattle, to exceed the 300,000 who saw the ex- position at the Bell Street Terminal last year. One of the most novel ways of doing it—a method that would: prove sure-fire and would attract national attention — | would be to invite the whole state of Washington to a barbecue. Set the tables down the middle of Second ave, or Third ave., out in the August sun. Roast the oxen or. the pigs, or whatever the main course of the “chow” will be, at | street intersections. | Send invitations to every citizen of the state whose name it is possible to get. Make the feed free. And in connection with it, turn everybody loose for a free day at the theaters, movies and other places of amusement. Keep an open house for Washington for a day, with Seattle footing the bills. Compared with the good will that such an innovation would bring, and the national advertising it would make for Northwest products, the cost would be trifling, H It’s worth thinking about! i GROP worth over two billion dollars a year is im- _& periled by the “borer” insect now advancing westward into the corn belt. If a foreign nation started fighting us to make us pay | that much indemnity a year, every. one would rally against it. *n | Why do we submit tamely, almost indifferently, to | in woul son is that professional patriots, war bankers, munitions makers and propagandists can’t make large and sudden fortunes rousing the mob against insects. What Our Coal Costs EARLY 2,500 American coal miners were killed in 1923, final check-up shows. This means that one miner gave up his life for every 237,000 tons of coal brought to the surface. Fortunately, the death rate among miners is gradually dropping. It was reduced almost a tenth last year. Pro- teetive laws, won after long and intense campaigns by newspapers and other ageneies, are bringing results. More than half of accidental deaths in and around mines are due to falls off roofs and coal. Our National Wealth HE national ‘wealth of our country now is about 320 billion dollars, according to the way Uncle Sam fig- ures it, including money, real estate, autos, homes, farm | animals, mines, oil under the earth, railroads, ete. If all this were divided evenly, there'd only be about $3,000 for every man, woman and child. How much does | your combined family average below or above this figure? An error in the government estimate is that it doesn’t include the greatest form of national wealth— man power. Without human labor, all other forms of wealth are worthless. Labor is beginning and the end, | Alpha and Omega. | The Time to Kiss HE safest time to kiss is midnight. The most danger- ous time is early in the morning, germs having ac- cumulated during the night. As the hours roll by, germs are gradually eliminated from their favorite nest—mouth and lips. Even at 4 in the afternoon, kissing still is risky. This important information is supplied by Dr. Donald | B. Armstrong, of Metropolitan Life Insurance Co, A conference of physicians recently classified kissing \ as an “extra hazardous occupation.” Most people believe that the prize is worth the peril. | Circus Stuff! . PEECHES and other noise, at the coming conventions to nominate presidential candidates, will be broadcast Porcertally enough to be heard by about 12 million radio ‘ans. Don’t fail to tune in. It will be an education, to follow the circus performances and learn of the dignity and high intelligence employed in selecting our ruler, 4 é | Our Standing Army A DOCTOR, discussing the 40,000 Red Gross nurses in America, says: “They hold the front line trenches ‘against disease,” Nurses and physicians are the real “standimg army.” They guard the public against a danger far more formid- able than military invasion. Bacteria, plant life cousins of toadstools, are our greatest enemies. We are so busy killing each other when we're not recuperating for an- other fight, and so engrossed in legitimate stealing (try ing to get something for nothing or for. less. than we offer in exchange) that we have little time for the great- he tial disease, Proving that we're still in the sayage etate, one ‘ }tituck-raking committee. anslaughts from Fipghenations, ipeepie, the worst mtcx-raking | lly on’the warpath Tea- ~ mittee that ever cat“hw m represéntn. | Korean Leaders Praise U. S. Stand in Excluding Japanese AND ANSWERS HILE Japan is holding mass meetings and dubbing the exclusion In the past, thie United States, while admitting all Orie udents, r - } ‘ , ‘ ‘ , nort * YOU can get an answer to any provisions of the new immigra 1 bill as “discriminator Korean is required thése from Korea to present a Japanese passpc vefore estion of fa 1 informa also excluded under the bill as Orientals, take occasion to congratulate ntering Japan né the power given it by the gent i this country on the fairness of its acti , that | Lditor ; : > ent, has demanded, according to Dr. Rhee, t K . i Dr. Syngman Rhee, styled the “President of the Republic of Korea . mn , ; bef sla ply. Medica in a statement issued from the Korean commission in Washington points | @¢knowledge allegiance t pan before a i per can eatonqea 4 : ut that the United States has, in the past, “flagrantly discriminated” | Koreans refused to do—not recognizing the shupxateen of Korea be Mtewered--RDITOR. | against all Oriental nations except the panese by recognizing the gen- | and as a result they have practically been marred from country, Uemen’s agreement and by allowing Japan a privilege denied to all other “By recognizing J n’s preposterous celal oO its rac i periority, When w be nations, namely, that of regulating her own immigratior America_is not only encouraging the over-sensitivene Japan's ng! tig ogg 4 saailon yeh ‘The present bill,” he says, “excluding all Orientals on an equal footing, | tional pride, which is a dangerous policy, but also offending all othep Vort Ay roo.| | will remedy e injuries done by special favoritism and will leave no Asiatic races whose good will and friendl dispo ition will mean more tuundsen re the South 9 just cause for complaint, providing the law is enforced strictly to all to America commercially or otherwise than that of tne comparative) if I 8 c ; Decwwther 34. 201, Orientals alike.” mall island empire,” Dr. Rhee added. Q. What will prevent rain from 2 4 sticking 1 & windshield y 7 A. Mie about two ounces of W 4% ‘ i | : ae * Y 2 mie wit ang sees ot asting His Salt WOMEN HA I dram of salt, Apply this to oe 7 glass with a cheese clouh.. Wipe T V I C E PR ESI DE @ vertical direction only, ad that Fig 05} Jr J mizture will allow the,fein to i Ee ie © down and off the’ dldas | BY HARRY HUNT Q. What is the proper way to eat BY HARRY B. HUNT ' ‘ you ot colery ’ Is a spoon ever used to cat N. BE. A. Service Writer ue 4 rep n . Jemnocratie a fruit salad? ASHINGTON ‘ rote, 29st hele re quotes A. Celery is eaten with the fin W Scat aa apa pubiic Privately, they'd gers, always, Balt sould be sprinkled : a |, tequirem it yo Jat the side of the plate, or on the en The thing by | ink the 4 ing tot, bread and butter pl and the cel ale ad ‘ores up t | #0, who's beh And de ery daintily dipped in it, The sal Paes | you re hink they're serious? 4 fork ta always used for frult salad, : I know that this matter of of any other kind, A spoon ts never This | demanding t ‘ hb from f « h e Q. What : mper fidelisn sovotis meat! of to th t an? ‘ ‘ A ) ful. aning aIT b zon poe ¥* Oar from a w Q What 4 the what point P ‘ th Bei) ' is by locomot poln: | ble mm the republi. made by locomotives meant» For some weeks there has can side are Mrs. Harriet Tay: whe short backing up, three lon o been a gr “spicion that | lor Upton of Ohio, chairman’ ef udden stop while running, two long Ln hf up to some. | 6 Woman's section’ of: the te land one short. IM | Publican ‘national committees | eee thing, but Just what’ it, was,se and Mrs.’ Maude Wood Park, Q. Is there an old age pension mained in doubt Recently a | pyesident of the National League law for men who served in the runner arrived with a breathless of Women Voters world war? story of a plan the ladies | Should the republicans reject { 4. Ne | to kidnap the vice presidency at_ |. this leap-year proposal by the en 0*@ | the republican convention. bd ladies to let them share the re Q. How, Jong does: tt take for a} Conceding that Coolidge has sponsibilities of high office—ag dio meseage to travel around the the presidential nomination al even the proponents of the plan world? ready sewed up, the women will expect they will—there yet re A. Lisa than a second, for elec be content, for this time, with maing t democratic conven trielty travels at @ epeed of 186,000 second place on the ticket, but tion, where a similar propos miles a second they will make’ a real and tion can be tried. In fact, the 4 S: ae ' odds in favor of acceptance by the democrats might bé ered’ better than by the earnest fight for that. At least Q. What is the annual production so the story ran. of coal in the United States? for | A. In 19283, the last yeor cans, since the democratic com ( ’ . e which figures are available, it was SITTIN’ ON THE) seation win nave much larger 56,718,127. tone. feminine representation among tae PORCH prepped Q. Who is the present heavy- BY HAL COCHRAN Emily Newell Blair, chairman weight champio: urope ? FTER the grind of a- trouble: of the national democratic. wom- ‘ A. Spalle, an Italia some day, when you're need- ing of real gelaxation, shed ‘all your carés and remain unawares of ali, save a few hours’ vaca- tion You're due for a rest; shed your coat and your vest and’blot ‘out the cares of the day. | Hie to the stoop and just let your nerves, droop. as you watch Mother Na- ture at play. The birds inthe trees and the cool evening breeze dre restful if man makes-them such. Look the world over and smell of the-clover Ba eck Ae reat open-air touch. reweout your chest’ and just en's committee, would be the likely choice for such a test at the New York convention. Telling It to Congress (Excerpts from the Congressional Record) Pol Ww How Middle West Industries’ Have Combined to Help Rescue ‘Farmers| P a We have heard a good deal from / the Senator (Mr. Watson) about a/| 1 bare no; doubt. that in the estimation of many | five of this body ts that which dis jit to the public view, and lets the peo: {ple know |have been going on to the disgrace | jand injury of the republic, |raking! A muck rake will not bring }up any muck unless there is muck the kind of things that “Muck | cloned the frightful wrongs done thin | HE story of how the farmers velopment f Northern, ratirond, Leedy explained the working of the Agricultural Credit cor- poration, which was organized to help the farmers in North Da of the Great “This led to an agreement farmers who were stricken. “The money | is | thru» subsidiary bailt up around | agents, and every farmer, before | he can borrow money, must be administered organizations the county “The farmer pays 7 per cent government in connection with the of the Middio Wert are be among raiir serving the ter. | on. hix loan, 1 per cent of the lungs to the brim. Breathe long oll reserves, That js the kind of| Ing aided in meeting the acute ritory, financial organizations mohey being used for a sinking and ateddy, ‘causo nature ie'ready muck raking the senator from In-| farm economic situation that and many other private busi- | funds to cover bad loans, lowses to help keep your system in trim: {diana and those of his school of| now exists was brought. to, Se- nesnex that were ‘interested to |, in stock while in. the administer tabragbaet nnidtitts-socviedg tlie {thought most fear, the rake that goes! aftle on Saturday by EB. C. form a $10,000,000 concern that | ing organization’s hands, etc. been furictioning keen and run- | down into genuine muck and exposes| Leody, general agricultural de would lend money to yeputable “Actual work oo the’ plan is ning in form thru the day. It's just starting, « recent meeting in Fargo, N. D., being the first held by a loan committee, Butwe ex pect the plan to spread rapidly thru the territory we will em- brace and think It will, to a large drag in a breath and fill up your OH, SUCH A PAIN! great to go to it, but don’t overdo emember your system needs Tt takes you right across the bach Sometimes in the arm, hip or Probably .due’ to oyer abundance |= that poison called uric acid. Happen] (Copyright, 1924, @eattie Star) ‘ when the kidneys weaken and am there.—-Senator Reed (Dem), Mis-| kota and parts of South Dakota passed upon by a committee of extent, take away the farmers’ | Shae dare fitter all the uric, ad rourt, and Minnesota his neighbors, If the loan is de- burden. Indirectly, the plan is a | from the blood. se tbe “After the government's pro- cided upon, he can borrow, with. | ‘club’ over the farmer to com- | i EVERYBODY'S TROUBLES The problems of the farmer are in | pendent very largely upon his pros perity.~ | reality the problema of ail of us, The | jfuture prosperity of everyone is de- | Representative Williams {Repo Michigan, | gram for farm relief failed,” he said, “President Coolidge. called in Mr. Jaffrey, Minneapolia banker, told him that it was vital that some kind of relief be given to the farmers and asked him to lake over’ the task of arrang ing it. out any cash payment, sufficient | money to. equip his farm with | livestock or implements up to the point that the investigating com. mittee thinks practical. Repay- | ‘ment of the loan does not begin 1° until after a year, when 10 per cent is due, pel him to diversify, as the com mittee will not recommend a loan unless it ig shown that the bor rower will raise sufficient feed for the animals he wants to buy, a8 well as other crops, “And diversification of crops is There's more of this ible winter, following a cold, or an jtack of grip, which, like any © | infectious. germ, disease, fills {blood with an extra load of p that overwork and -break ¢ kidneys, =. oa You may know the kidneys is own sight!—Isa. ! the big answer to the farm prob- Jem of today. That's what farm experts everywhere have been | preaching to the land owners. And this teaching now is begin- ning to show results. “If the Agricultural Credit cor- poration is the success we expect | WH to be, 1 would not be surprised | to see it spread to cover the whole grain-growing country, al- tho I do not believe it will get to the Coast. Big men of many in- dustries are on the executive committee, and, altho $10,000,000 weak when you have constant’ ache, sick headache; dizzy twinges and pains of lumbago, matism, or neuritis, or when's is disturbed two or three’ night. At the famous Inyalids’ | Buffalo; N. Y. (Dr. Pierce, hundreds of such cases are trem every year, and the result has'd this discovery, Avoid too much meat, 4 tea, Drink plenty of water, pr ably hot, before meals, follo one An-uric (antl-uric-acid) Ta (A THOUGHT | fil Woe unto them that are wise in thelr own eyes and prudent in their TEST YOURSELF For Word Association eee | MAN'S praises have very musi} A ‘10-year-old ‘child should’ be sub- eal and charming accents in an. | Ject to this test. Draft your son al other’s mouth, but very flat and un. | daughter or a neighbor's child, j tunable In his own.—Xenophon. | self and see how superior you are in naming words. The iden is to see how many But you ean also try it’on your.| words can be named jn three min- lutes. Have someone keep time, FABLES ON HEALTH | telling when to begin and when to | ‘stop. Also have the timekeeper is the amount decided upon to | your y obtained in G5c bottles-at any. jeount the words as they are said start the venture, the corpora. | store. This treatment dissolves BABY AND HIS BATH Any words will do in this test,| ton has the credit to get $100, flushes out the uric acid and such 300k," “automobile,” | 000,000 of It's needed.” |to bring kidney action back to ete. Urge the petson 7 mal, N’T it cut Lb Beingsies cum to powder, ay. | Wateh out for the tender eyen, If) 4 to do his best. and If you want a trial pacl Mr. Mann would almost purr| there is any sign of Inflammation, |namie as many words aa he can as Eaagemhiorneexts anit An-uric tablets, send as he watched Mrs. Mann take the| summon the doctor, Borlo acid solt-| fast as he can. = T of abartaay h poe Pierce, Invalids'. Hotel, first Mann baby over her knee for |tion-may be used if any sign of eye bard tS Y¥.—Advertisement. KIDNEY TROUBLE DO YOU HAVE DIZZY SPELLS— We ' pretion is found. If the none be see api mes stopped, a, boric acid solution’! again is advisable. After the first month the tempera. ture of the water may be lowered to be sponged with water at a tempera-|95 degrees, and then gradually re.|!ctly Separate, However, words {ure of 100 degrees, Ho carctul t|duced to 86 degrdens” After che hat | having. the same. meaning “are ac have a special cloth for body and for | it is well to sponge the child off with | CePtble, for insta abe: ‘water at about 76 degrees, Pat hae ak The as “four,” “five, ete., are not allowed; nefther «re words put together forming sen- | tences or phrases, such as “the lit. tle dog.” All words must be dis- the regular bath, Of course Mrs. Mann had been well supplied with instructions on how best to bathe the baby. For a short time the baby should YOUNG GIRL Words Failed to Express Benefit | Received from Lydia E.Pinkham’s », “hat,” cap," | Vegetable Compound | Greenville, normal 10-year-old should} Texas. — ‘‘ Words can | name 60 words In the three minutes. | not express how much good Lydia E, DO ¥. 4 | ‘OU SUFFER FROM PAINS IN THE BACK— | ! ar I “T24 rg | (All rights reserved by Science | es Pinkham’s Vege- ARE YOUR HANDS, FEET OR JOINTS ~ rvice, 1115 Conn, ave. N. W.,, rr "] table Compound wou i PAINFUL OR Washington, D, C) s done 5 DO YOU HAVE FRI IR SCA |ON— | ses nha: ARE THERE BRICH-DUST DEPOSTTO Se ne CMINATH VRIDGE Dear Folks: I often go to make a call on lo then I get the stall, “He's busy: ten use a little trick I've know 1 get him on the phonet At other times 1 call and wait until T find him free. It’s really quite a weary fate, or so it seems to me, For while T walt bealde his door, with many minutes flown, I hear him—and it makes mo sore—he's talking on the phone! And when at last I'm ushered in, I go and take a chair, In eager haste I then begin to tell him why I'm there. ‘Tho phone bell rings, insistent, shrill; it’s rotten luck, 1 own—TI-sit and swear and grumble till he's finished on the phone! And there's the guy who makes it hard for men he ought to seo. You have to give # girl your card, and state your pedigree. And tho he's quite a formal stitt with whom to falk alone, he's prompt and democratic, if—you got him on the phone! And oftentimes I wonder what the reason really is. You go and eall|and, like ax not, your toil and time will fizz, But yet you very seldom fail to get them on the phone—if there's a moral to the tale, you'll have to roll your own! jor uldhavecramps DOYOU HAVE RHEUMATISM, LUMBAGOORNEURALGIA— @ dh What Folks Are Saying ’¢ one by which TI never*lose—. || SACK JONES, Labor member Brit lish parliamet “T like the King v { much, pefsonally. What I object to is the institution, I want a president, but not like the American, The Brit. ish president should have no veto power,” May 3, 1924, freezing to death. | 1 suffered in this | way from the time | I wasa young girl, | and all the doctore | said was ‘opera- | tion.’ For months | Thad a tired, sleepy fecling all day, | and when night would come I would | be so nervous couldn't int in bed, Our druggist recommended the Vege- table Compound to my husband and he bought four bottles. I have taken every one and I think I have a right to peas your medicine, ra. J, | B. HOLLEMAN, 2214 E, Marshal St., | Greenville, Text | cca |. For fifty be Lydia BE. Pinkham’s ROBERT FB. LEE SANER, presi-| Vegetable mpound has been used dent American’ Bar assoolation: “It | by women from girlhood through you stop the mouth, you stop clvili.| middle age. | vation.” It is a dependable medicine for | troubles common to women. Such | symptoms as Mrs, Holleman had e If you have any of th above symptoms yo must beware of I and Bladder di Thousands are si and dying every ye from ayre Tro b Thousands more—wht are wiser—are gainin relief from pain and att] taining perfect hea through using Gino Pi Their healing, revitali ing influence 1s wo ful, business men. And now and all again.” And then I very of- | see ZITKALA-SA (Red Bird), Tndian princess: “Wardship is no substitute for American citizenship; therefore, we seek tho enfranchisement of the Indian.” Go to your druggist and get abot to-day. You can't be well sick kidneys, 50c at all druggists. Sample free if you write. eee EWING BERBERT, Kansas edi- tof: “This fx going to bo a good relieved by correcting the cause of NA-DRU-CO. ING, SSA year. We are all coming out of the | ‘ouble. Por sule by druggiste every- Buffalo, N.Y. nd | UMS," 44° where, tik s Ye Advertisement. |