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MARS MAY PAY OH! NOWITIS FOR PAVEMENT ALL EXPLAINED ncilmen to Fix Policy for Rights-of-Way This Harem Beauty THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1919. Cheers for President Wilson Packed with thrills! Telling the story of a woman answers the call of Fate and a steps forth to enjoy her ONE Old Man Consumer Causes WEEK OF LIFE! High Cost of Meats The ed te BBY on paving b municip My determined jefe in business distr ed for the improve ir streets, and funds Hidential districts Om either the r peneral funds ‘The Mncilmen raid ey base the mds that Of the city, str ments Property abutt ile in the residentia communit Two questions he Which remain is where tt Ratiness from re Mobe drawn, and ther “the general fund t railway fund shall b inden for the residential mnt Council Thomson ter first came up ies committee Thursday i the patrons of the ca @istricts served should se, they the ly benefite adva iment tha ar why the city should cent fare pmaxing the general fund would be unjust ‘ rgints 3 t t omen 4 t ‘ ss ; ae all the taxpayers Id not be ¢ . r - mam 1» EASTERN STAR tinted with him nd when he passed away I felt deeply the loss of a real friend and benefactor I made arrangements for credit h the P.-1. and Star for printin les, | ling them specia toc given out by S¢ the butet umer to a nd met n nt wede Kalser of the con to ¥ war oc committee Moc PAULIN FREDERICK —_I Nm “ONE WEEK OF LIFE” BY COSMO HAMILTON are a ktentia fe pri ar ement mpr Runs Down Auto and Loses Tooth J. Andersor argu: rth a bea spita, nan n lace u are and this world believe, During nationa speeches on rints be GUTERSON’S ORCHESTRA “ROWDY ANN” A Breezy Two-reel Christie Special Comedy, with Funny FAY TINCHER women made nt } edt on the z= known BRALEY VISITS SUES TO FREE NAME OFFICERS HISOLDHAUNTS — |. W. W. CHIEF Vanderveer Starts Fight for ome thruout SOR Boldt's, 1414 Third ad ave. t's Ko eat Or 913 Seco the acetd aah Hold Election at Masonic Former Star Poet Now on © cused of being a « | Times was go | Press Power May Be Made Bad |, | BY EDWIN J. BROWN Time was when the common people | Were well nigh helpless and arriving et mature political judgment because they had little or no means of ob- knowledge first hand, and there was no published medium in Mwhich the material interests of the ‘Plain people were championed ‘Today all newspapers and publica- Ms devote liberal space to ques- of vital importance the king class but many times it is d to deceive them. Was Made to Realize the Power of the Press In 1900 there was a combination in this state between the tate Dental Board and the State} Society, whose desire was en- into the statute law of the , by the legislature of that year, keep Eastern Dentists out of this Their arbitrary power and ‘ul law administration were sus by our courts, and because my large practice, I became the and victim of their lordly uctive power. I had to choose ween leaving the state or fighting my right to remain here. I suppose that some feather brain contend that I was not patri ; if this outrage had been perpe- ted fn 1918. My Friend Indeed When I Was 4 in Need | The Dental Combine said: “P must go.” The courts in substance ctioned what the Dental Board das final. I knew that the pub- ¢ would stand by me for fair play @nd a square deal, if I could only get my story before it. Much money fas required for attorneys’ fee feourt costs, printing briefs, typewrit Ing, stationery, To print ory in the newspapers was an ex Penditure veyond my means, but it had to be done. Colonel Alden J. Biethen My Friend I wa own ote my } Years ago, man times ac- hort of the Seat- fle Times. Of course, these people @id not know that Colonel A. J. SB Biethen had done for me one of the Sgt \test§favors of my life. Well,| wi 2 I decided to tell my story to Ai public, 1 went up and told Col-| jon A. J. Blethe at I wanted to| 40 at I would probably be owing him about thousand dollars when I had finished publishing my icles, as 1 calculated spend bout two thousand dollars telling my story to the public in his paper. If I could remain here, he would get the last thousand, but if I had to leave, he would be out that much. He laughed and said; “Brown, 1 have been watching that crowd and it i# astonishing to what length the courts will go in sustaining their ac tions. Now,” said the Colonel, “I am going to stay by you. Ydu write a foreword, embodying the underly- fing legal principles for which you are contending and tell why you are | going to publish your articles and bring it to me, so 1 can look it over.” I left the Times office feeling like @ champion and returned in a few days with my article ready to print. The Colonel took it, read it over and maid: “Good! Go ahead and give fem h—I! 1 will tell the business Office about your account, but Brown, make your articles come Within the federal law so that they Ml go through the mails, If ‘were going to print this forewo yer as reading matter,” 1, “it would cost you four hundred dollars, is much merit in it am going to Print it because of its merit.” Now you know why 1 more than ou in he three or but there and 1 | was a lie. ng to print them, an the exposure of the Dental C by the use of thé press demonstrate: o me by making It possible lor me to stay here. | When Used Against the People may be unfair and eceitful and cunnin. truths and whol it may give columns of favor ‘omment to rascals and betray- the peo d a stingy, ob seure line to the activities of tho with honesty of purpose, in workin for the public good Whea e had strike « ituted La faked a picture ¢ scene in Seattle by tak ing the pieture of the American Bank Building at Second Avenne and Madison Street, and then cut ting a picture of a riot to fit in of the building and then takin phe aph of the fake riot picture, | and producing a cnt pict for the paper, which picture when printed! showed a suppored riot at | Avenue and Madison Street in Seat-| tle, when the strike was on. Everyone in Seattle knows thi and now the whole world| to know that Seattle's a lie and a fake promulgated by those who would “hang people to light poles,” or “kill | them with their naked hands,” while | the gener: newrpaper ot riot pic is beginning revolution was the hero of the revolution was stand-| ofthe gi ing on his head. Indeed, the power of the presa can for a time make| “damfools” look like real men Seattle's Revolution » Pure Fake But—Witness the Power of the Press 1 was in Olympi gen eral strike started. The first night word was flashed to Olympia newspaper men that “soldiers with machine-guns were patrolling the streets in Seattle; one building had been blown up and another was on fire Hired stool-pigeons ons had said that the lights in hosptt the city water and milk} r children would be shut off, and} was rushed into pub The moving picture machi was made ready. A dozen jolly, fa poligemen were marched up the street with rifles hand; tru with sandbags placed around « chine ready this when the in labs in n, were mi before the for publicity wm of t moving picture Nast i prin to create false the coun od that & on @ Sabbath dogs wake up. The world outside of| Seattle, however, waa f: ly led to believe that a revolut sprung on us like magic on the wire, like thi “Hello!” “Hello, Ole?” “Ole, where are yc the boys from Camp L- “Oh, I thought I would send them} out to Fort Lawton or the Univer-| nity,” “Why don’t you keep them down town where you are going to need them?” “oO JT don't thin! need for morning kk there wif be down here. We at the poli rything ts quiet.” 1 “Yes, you will need them, Thero| 6 three or four thousand men| around office and the| or Temple now. Come up to the ington.” } hem y of men and eve the “All right A revolution HERO (who was made and a would kill with naked hands) was made by the power of the press (Oh My!), and this, too, notwithstanding not a single fist fight or arrest was recorded because of the general strike. Even the moving picture sereens of the coun have not been able to feed the orbid of curionity because ¢ was not one riot, one unlawful threat made, or even a marge that a violent act had been mitted because of the strike ext week 1 shall write Russa and treks and the of the press. After that I shall drosn four open letters, one each urday, to Mayor Ule Hanson, eyes about power jmu Second | ° comm Dinner wi Deerin jfor Girls @ to Ket them Temple Way East whore dally vermes perfectly good space & troubadour exce seo—and these « plumbers « ewrpaper man. hus Mre cond Minnie Wen atche or, © Pans for the « about the time had subject rtainment of the reporter and by be more ‘ ° of the |x e than those grand rep ju dic suppowe Tl have beat from here remarked, like breaking and but it's slong, follows t make a story about me Whiter didn't SOVIET FORCES CAPTURE CITY we DEERING TO SPEAK Mra. Iva Deering, sion of nervice of course, superintendent a the war will apeak re ub, at Good Mra Recreation mmnonwe cafeteria, Mond be served 5:30 Ys subject w It is easier to want things than it vantage Over Kolchak June 10.—-(Delayed.) Capture of Oufa, complished after three days of desperate fighting, haa given “Tn human affairs et armies an opening for ther efforts and |‘ « the entire territory oc a nip oer rad Admiral Kolchak’s armies, there are results. to the claim of Bolshevik vuthorities toda on) e 1b Kodak brings the great- est results with the least effort. Our show what forces it th of Rr ago Kodak Man _ will factory in Rus. you how—that’s he is here for. mentioned patch probat the Oufa re. nens ” northw Amur river, mil 610 Pike ured = Friday left hand mangle, Her | burned perial laund: lous | when her wa hand drawn into was badly Nature’s Wonders Never Cease s of mar ull-wise Providence has mysteriously arranged for all the want For instance, F w bored for w The re the cactus voleanic sof and rom the Bast, a tract of desert waste. rock mile: as an eyesore until § , with means ult was ever flowing s and sagebruah tesian wells that transformed over night into a garden of beauty. Nature provides ve. They contain different w« are over 3,000 in number and must t to assist the larger number of the body which should be eaten In season, glands and ducts of the body kept in running order, so as Water-cress is a remedy for scurvy Carrots are fe Asparagus inc Sp those suffering with asthma 1068 perspiration h is splendid for thone Lettuce Ix conducive to sh Blackberries aré useful in Cranberries, for erysipelas Lemons for feverish thirst and purges the blood suffering P. all cases of diarrhoea. used internally and externally, in sickn with gravel Everything in season—at your service appetite and give zest that satiafien MUSIC DANCING : SINGING Sunday Dinner in Courses, $1.25 the Person HOTEL BUTLER CO. Our foods stimulate the was tell, Said to Have Gained Ad-| > captured the | Fred Lowrey his purpore ip to free after the Var Rpok vrit of habea » constitutionality wa » serve from two n affirn prosecutior Let's fo ent at Roldt’s. or 913 Second ave convicted on a erim harre Ma ona Vanderveer launched alleged anarchists here, strength of the supreme court's de was he result of the give Lowrey YG yw UY LAST TIMES TONIGHT MADGE KENNEDY —IN— “LEAVE IT TO SUSAN” ted t w. Ww. i ° mupreme opus Ready to Strike FRA June 14 Press.) nia telephone 100 per cent at » Bend, aw an sen is} 10 y of operators the 1 alif SAN Unite are Matthew O'Connor, reer ' y organize the| pe #, practical org r e have erly aw for months, and in other ocast to quit work union officials § state They predict a complete of the nation’s telephone| Monday, will be jc 1 in Califor- by the nation-wide strike, /nia by 3,00 mpany ed for Wednesday morning eh took a The strike is to be started on and decided ee) the Pacific coast, and the operators out with that ‘will net an example for the whole line workers. ! human crank. the loral | OTR" againet on the jer cities and these|a lined up for union n Ke ing str orders ke the A telephone girls ready are reported fully O'Connor the The walkout of telephone and tel- trical workers, ed for joined September, 1917, all are also care, Vander ations and was ond lieutenant. elec. | turned strike | Alto, Cal. a wystemn some time their w mmunicatic 1414 Third to cor of the ¢ BCG US PAT are THE BEVERAGE he alt- year-round sott drink Rome was not built in a day SeOO0 es but Bevo's popularity be- came countrysvide in three months because of five years prepar-~ ation in perfecting the beverage. Sold ovory whore ~ Familios supplied by Srocor, druggist and dealer. Visitors are invited to inspoct our plant> ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST.LOUIS. Schwabacher Bros. & Co. Ine, Wholesale Distributors SEATTLE, W abn. = Liy Oa i yy, 0¥ l/h By M1) eve * fd U cA) ann “yt ws! msc TTT HTT ‘Matt” O’Connor Wins Promotion former Star as reporter, received his commission as has been work-| first Heutenant in the medical corps ‘a few days ago, at Camp Lewis, the medical corps was made nt, first class, later took the ex- commissioned as — He has just we from Camp Fremont, Palo & It takes a lot of salve to tem @ $e