The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 19, 1925, Page 10

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)

PAG o_— Newspaper Eo terprine Asan. ) Seventh eae Eee are IF COME of us seem to t ALIVE the rank € r ‘ make an officia n Now there's Sec of State i yanking member of esid ( | } cabinet. He seems to view the future, as ' the poets have as thru a darkly Apparently he | n ort of a notion that we are teetering on the very brink of bolshevism or communism or some ;other appalling disa He appears to H think we Americans are et j certain in our own inds whether we | wish to remain loyal to the star-sps standard of Moscow for banner or flock to the Otherwise, how account taling of this foreign visitor ring of that one? A man does not tremble ery This paper entertains as to our country or its future. Americans are a red-blooded lot They know pretty much what they and are not milling around in circles wait ing for some outsider to come along a tell them. ; Afraid of little Saklatvala, communi +member of the British parliament? $ *to let him spend a week in this country when the British put up with him all the time? Were Lenin himself alive and at ‘the summit of his glory this paper believes she might be permitted to come to Amer- iea, and stump the country from coast to coast for a year-or for a lifetime without ever being able to carry a county. That is the way most people feel about thi§ country. If conditions-do not war- jvant this confidence, then Washington has tbeen keeping something from us. And if +things are as bad as that it is high time the 110,000,000 of this nation were being sure of gust of wi no such doubt people or the want If things are not like that; if our faith ‘in America is not misplaced—and not for 7&4 moment do we believe it is—then let us have done with bans and muzzles on those who merely want to come here for “a temporary stay HE DID W HAT? ONDON editors seriously_insist that, last time, the Prince of Wales was fot thrown by his horse, but just fell off. It is impossible to grasp the policy of ‘Such editorial attitude. Do they want us ‘to deduce that Edward was so full of some Sort of juice that unbalances? Do they want us to believe that even the horses *eonsider the royal youth’s dignity? Are We to estimate the prince’s horsemanship to be so vile that he falls off even when the horse is perfectly willing that he stick on? There is no possible compliment or sat- isfying excuse in saying that Prince Ed- Ward fell off. Any poor “nut” can do that. The S Seattle Star == at Beattin Wr ? ? Answers to Your Questions ? ithe, W aal f Maren #, 178 PAYS VICTOR TOO defeated \ 0 ur it unable to pay t next installment 1 its own interr debt Both the Ger an and the French governments must xact great sacrifices from their people But Gert vernment has the dvantage of bei to tell its people t these sacrifices are the ty of efeat, and that, for vhole generatior Germa must we harder and_ live plair than other peoples to recover from ar. The French government has to ‘tsk people to do much the same thing the price of victory. Both are doubtle: necessary, but the one is much easier for the people to understand The hard discipline of sacrifice is the only hope of Europe. Defeat has prepared the Germans to mi it BRING IT ON! A BIG New York audience has taken, vith seriousne Hamlet in A tuxedo Ophelia in a modern dance frock and the rin a derby hat This settles it. What New York approve the rest of us must mn to swallow Bring on the modernized Shakespeare in toto King Lear and auto goggles? beth in a hal grave digg mustache Certainly. Lady Mac kimono, with rolled stockings? Of course. Romeo in balloon pants? The very thing. Richard ITI, roar- ing “A horse! My kingdom for an elec tric horse!” Don't overlook it. A starched shirt for Julius Caesar and a smooth, round paunch for the lean and hungry little with a dinky ngth Cassius. Shylock in full evening dress, and Portia in a United States supreme court shroud. An ear-trumpet for Hamlet's dad’s ghost. By all the shades of Booth, Keene, Irv ing and Terry, the legitimate has got to be resuscitated, tho it take Shak ure in bib and tucker, with a typewriter his lap, to do it! NO SECOND CHANCE EFEREE O'GQRMAN dee that Jay Gould’s four eldest children lost $50 000,000 of his estate. Jay Gould wo «l his hands, head and soul to death to pile n up $82,000,000. The fortune became an investment in a bitter fight among his children. It is also paying their lawyer at an aggregate rate of $60 per minute during the hearings. Jay is dead and no richer than the liest pauper. The law suit is still alive and the lawyers doing fairly well on $60 per minute. What would Jay do, could he have another chance to leave things? He, doubt less, loved his children and he had enough | experience with lawyers to prompt him to | dodge them. Q. When was Dorothy Arnold kid- | &— maped? \ “A. December : . 910 } . a ‘OU can get tof} ai ‘ ucted by ¢ any question of fact or in- lin<C6:. of Ger ae formation by writing The Seat- overnment fe @ How many hospitals are there) YPOCRISY is oftenest cloth. | ed in the garb of religion — decessors. floges. she KIN remember, way back as a kid, of lots things I did. 1 often recall of tho open air enjoyed down on grandmother's 0, Having acquired new charm that o Q What is the largest species gy) | te Star Quesjion Editor, 1322 two smaller type ai t horse mackerel? New York ave, Washington, | |‘, the Uniled Btates was ‘A. Tuny. They are found in| | D.C, and inclosing 2 cents tn) | iitieg at the close of the worl Biuropean waters and also caught| | loose stamps for reply. No} | /-., fm large quantities off the coast of| | Medical, legal or marital ad. | | Eebigh Southern California. binant rac Lanpyreper rs ayaa a Q. What 1s the present far ee dential All letters must be} | bags nt capi © @ What is the monetary unit in| g Msned ak aromas S the Philippine islands? ingrad, was A The peso, worth 50 cents in|or navct services, by homestead é United States currency. One pesolentry in a country where thia con fa equal to 100 centavos. Other| dition is a presumption of al Q Are t ' women bk éoine are 50, 20, 10 and &, and one|legiance, investment in commercial|in t Nr nN al ¢ gentavo piece. lenterprises the nature of wwhich|t se | necessitates the establishment of a| 4. There are a number of wives Q How many policemen are there | permanent residence abroad, etc. | of sildiers burt here, in the same ‘in the United States? | alte fs graves with their husbands. There © ArAccording to the 1920 census’ Q Was the airship Los Angeles|is aleo a special plot set aside for there were 82,120. purchased by the United States or| the burlal of nurses of the Span aed |did we receive {t from Germany ish-American, civil and world ware } Q Where are the largest oil fields Yn the world? A, In California and the mid-con- | finent fields in the United States 7 h D bi St d d and’ the fields of Mexico and é OU é an ar —— Sieke | By Mrs. Walter Ferguson in the United States? A PERPI D young wo: thought that all the A. The, American Medical associa- man is worried about “the | fruft which men have Hon lists 7,281 accredited re taned: double standard of mors nd now tante should be pres fn the United States in 192 nothing fair in # syst 040. her. ipa and which allows certain privile And in doing so dallies Q In there any way in which a; to men and forbids them to wo the thought ich ‘ras natural-born American citizen can} men | oy he lose his Ameriean citizenship ex- And she has plenty of com | For, in the last analy wa fept by taking out naturalization) pany, for a good many women d much hette have the papers in a forelgn country? have spent a lot of time think double standard, unjust as tt A. One may lose American clt-| ing the same thing about the than to have women, jn or fzenship by protracted residence, yume que * | der to “got even,” think they pared, by joining foreign military Pagan, and Christian civiliza- | ©an tread tho primrose path tions have had the double stan h impunity Zz A \ THOUGHT | }} lard because the men found it | Vor immorality reacts chief venient to establish it and upon individual, It may not having had the balance of be, a» many pi now argue This people draweth oe ah ao unto | power for centuries, were able a sin a but it me with their mouth and honor. | keep women subjected to th without iit sas eth me with their fips; but their | idea ourselt. on, elther heart is far from me.—Matt. 15:8. he modern woman questions | man ot n, indulges in aces Ged | this inju mote openly and lone iiving without paying a loudly than of her pre price that is high We women have been wont to dallies with the that the men can do a nd ‘get by,"” and once may have done so, but they can do this no more, They pay, and in precious coin, for ever vil deed, fo ery in decent, unmanly act. They pay in the lows of their children's faith, in the destruction of their wife's love, in the death of their friends’ re t, and in the bit of the funny an’ queer ter knowledge that they have polluted thelr phied thadr oT bodies and atro souls, and in return | | | | I still hear the squeak and the thumpety-thump; the clang of the ned—nothing. ¢hain in the erazy ol’ pump, It stood in the yard and was painted all cency, clean living, whole green, and up from the rondway could plainly be seon thinking, are worth a Whiy, 1 used to awk. to fetch water each day, ‘cause, geo, 1 enjoyed thousand times more than an ft, when pumpin y. 1d prime it a bit, and Vd turn the old fhit else in life. 'To@women, crank, an’ water'd go tricklin' away down the bank they are of inestimable tue It seemed that the \bors, for 1 y mile round, were con Do not doubt that the pure atantly trampin’ oll over the ground that led to the hillway, and thon tn Hoare nod God. or while the 40 the brink where stood the old pump, an’ I'd give ‘om a drink Lnelean creep about In the mud ‘The old-timers toll me it ne'er has run dry. The farmhouse is gone and slime of thelr own viciou hut the pump standa on high. It's calling me now, in my throat | news, these others walk serenely there's a Jump, I long for a drink from the old farmyard pump, with thelr faces toward the (Copyright, 1926, for The Seattle Star), stars, vay MN A i THE | OUT OUR WAY 2 > I {[SAAN! FER GosH | SAWES MEN! AT Y MY GOSH! \ WoNnT Do! wy we ITS A ¢ \ ALL BE MASSY CURD ! } THinsG E OVR FORT RoNNIN | ONY .PRAK n AWAM FROM wh FRONT | AW AIN! ¢ }US JUS WEN WERE] WEST : TACK TED BY IN[ TAKIN THE COVER OUT OF COVERED WAGON THUI Y Mr. Fixit of The Star Are of P l © BETES ears ' f T T! L (ON 4 i x1 ' THEN ) 1 Hl 19 you awd the s ; / PEDI ‘ ] ey DAD : fore § ment. . Sit ¢ 1 talk t T ie Obier ver | By Jim Marshall | ee mn Ann t i s 1 @ i a i ion ft 14 at oa a fountain, came to 1 th nd ply but the inconvenience the car c probably wou no ve stopped; carriages were often Known to drive on and leave thelr wounded behind.” eters so you see—that a hun hit-and-run | ar easy to be AND, LISTEN: The old world doesn't chang e—very much—and human nature is about the same today | as it was a hundred years | ago—in Paris—or a million earn ago a dismal swamp—some in MO Me eee a L. , . [ Editor’s Mail ) | Editor The I have resided north of Lake Union for’ 96 years and have seon this district develop trom | af soattered houses in the | woods to its present growth Our continuous need out here has been for better tion to and from the | ne district " topor forces transporta main busi natural raphy the traffic vell defined channel. The great need at the present time only for the North Bnd but for the entire city and gure iy a new into not rounding country, bridge across Lake Union, and 1 believe after careful study of the situation that Stone way at | the north end and Dexter | at the south end is the location for logical u vlow hould be a high bridge hipping pa under ity oliminating noee We need the Star, as tho looks to newspaper along these Ines, help of the Seattle general public loadership Your paper —\-— The Mistakes of Kellogg ert ts | MONDE 1: i day How Secretary of State Brought Ridicule sctol 4h apekde Tha thas on U.S. by “Sacking of Saklatvala” ees dire steth A de epi THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19 — oe Ca by 1. B. ¢ ¢ y en not fan ‘ years My 1 hus 1 it A r Oi v t ce | T hese Gems I t A foolish com Ke did, suid that pa was (© exaggerate ¢ had been pa until the question of his vis created 1 who would maelf fa , sald the bitter ly anticommunist London Daily Express, had he been allowed to land in Amerira where the > ‘could for them ex the unutterable tosh” he has in his pate nator Borah and other lors this side of the At ntlo took very much the same view. Liberal opinion in this country well as abroad, to judge by widespread newspaper comment, saw neither wisdom nor dignity in “the sacking of Sakiatvala," as the Literar Digest called {t “When a swarthy Parsee that London puts up with without Any nervousness can cause Washington to throw a double duck said the Norfolh Virginian-Pile this countr may remain the land of the free but {t can no longer be called the home of the brave." of free dangerous “Such suppression peech Js far more the widest tolerance,” ob d the st iis Post-D} Moreover it is stupid." this The NaWion, the News, Brooklyn Eagle Sun Haven Courter, Philadeiphia Kansas City Star, C6 lumbus Ohio State Journal, Springfield Republican, New York World, Omaha World-Hor ald and othor representative papers agreed. on Yewark Baltimore New Journal Record, Said tho last named journal Jaklatvaln "is the mouse that has driven tho elephant crasy.” The attitude of many mem bers of congress, with whose views the writer is acquainted. has always beon the first to pull for the conmary Improve ments, Your splendid articles recently qn behulf of the stone way bridge, Denny regrade, Dex ter ave, exit, It. Lawton bridge, Wost Spokane street car bridge rapid transit pystem, — ote peaks well of your splendid foresight and sound judgment 1 have heard much favorable comment on these articles, Jot us Keep it up until our goal to attained. N, A. NILSON. For the Creditors They Only Got 45c for Every Dollar When They Settled This— BANKRUPT STOCK OF WATCHES, DIAMONDS AND JEWELRY Mr. S. Golub, for the last 35 years, has been in the diamond setting and jewélry manufacturing business. Kighteen months ago he personally selected this fine stock and entered the retail market with his son, Unfortunate circumstances forced them into bankruptey, and they now must sacrifice their $30,000 wonderful stock of jew- elry and precious gems, together with other stock of similar quality and design to satisfy creditors. COME EARLY Tomorrow and jake advantage of tremendous savings on Christmas jewelry. $87.50 Diamond Ring, 18-karat white gold mountings; newest de- ~ $27.50 t Watch— the newest rectangular style; 15 jewels; white gold case. Fully guar- anteed— $13.85 $12.50 Wrist Watch. Attractive jeweled watches in white gold- filled cases— $7.45 La Tausca and Bluebird Pearls. Beautiful, lus- trous pearls. HALF PRICE signs $19.85 $40.00 18-karat white gold Wedding Ring, set with five diamonds $23.85 $75.00 Blue-white Dia- mond Ring, set in an ae artistic 18-karat white L risen gold mounting: 50 Conklin Pen and Pencil Set, gold filled; men’s or ladies’ Sd: 95 sizes .. A wonderful 18-karat | white gold mountings, Golub’s personal »-HALF PRICE | "$2.49 59c A small deposit will hold any $17.50 Elgin and Waltham Watches; jew- eled, thin models; white and green gold - filled 00.00 Diamond Ring. Sparkling blue diamond pierced mounting .... set in beautiful 18-karat $53.50 $19.50 Men’s Strap Watch, The latest square models, dinekerhers $12.45 48c article to suit your convenience, GOLUB & SON JEWELERS 1412 SECOND AVENUE Next Door to Columbia Theatre a line of Mr. ‘ 16 jewels. Big Ben and Baby Ben Alarm Cloeks $1.00 Eversharp Pencils S Solid Gold Baby Rings

Other pages from this issue: