The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1919, Page 15

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PAGE 15 fhese Have Talked THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1919. WEDLOCKED It Didn't Sound Right AN’ NO ROUGE OR HAIR. NETS — THEY Re a NoT NECESSARY . ans ——-- — T —By LEO PETER, WE'LL HAVE T EVEN UP SOMEHOw, 30 IVE DECIDED To Go with QUT PERFUME AN’ TaLCUM Now -LETS SEE WHAT ELSE | CAN GET ALONG. Plane to #pemk with us talien angels? r Would an evil epirit take the snl of & precious child, or loving parent and come back and show themselves and talk with thetr dear ones? | What ts there wrong in our loved ones being able to get In touch with | us to help ust I laid away @ beautiful girt nearly seven years ago, and she has shown | herself to me more than once, when | T have been wide awake. Very often I hear her speak to mo. Many | Umes, when I have been in @istrou and Worried, I have heard her say “Tt will be all right,” and always it! has turned out all right Spiritualism has saved me from in sanity, fe ‘This life fs but @ achoo! to prepare |Us for the Hereafter; there is no real happitiess for any but those ~»} Who seek after spiritual things. home, but | A. M. MAYER, death, and Editor The Star: I started with the oulJa board. I could work it alone and it would rattle when I would pause, to urge me to let “them” write. Then I suggested trying to write with a pencil, and my «ptrit friends they passed to| were anxious to try. My little girl, who had died 12 years before, seem- ed to control the beard, and we ? | found diffieulty in writing, as I wrote in the old-fashioned slant, while she. used the vertical system, and it was | hard for me to get my hand in posi. {ten for her to write, But for alt! | that we became accustomed to each jother, and soon the pencil would \| FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS 5 LOOK Vob< (cb CREAM CONE~LooK\e HT VANUM = ITS G00. Shay in this, The dees not act while qe mind ie working. and e tions when never been hyp- T have had enough spirit writings to fill a large book. A READER. GS UP MATRITIONIAL AGENCY! I KNOW WHEN 1 GoT ENOUGH! LOOK WHAT ONE OF (Ty CUSTOMERS iO To re! @N AUTO MUST HOVE HIT Hin’ T HOPE HE ISNT i ag i Fi tis HH i Ht int i is i g ef Hy i i FE ra als i ib gti Hi ale ft | d : i $ tf rf iH i = ~ Bs a oi Figs 5 ~En i Ff i if i i i: iH At a } i 5 *F 2 if i PAVING COSTS TO BE DIVIDED BANISH REDS, Debs Says He Would Go to Gary at Once if Prison Door Opened today I would be in Gary or Pitts 8 li ii place at the lodge's 27th an- F i i DD Hl i i Hi : i! | i Gir Ay iF 7 7 | if : 3 Riversary obeervance, next Wednes day evening, in Masonic temple, fol- lowed by dancing. Walter F. Meier, city corporation ‘| show that 39 members served in army and navy during the war. One member, Corporal Alfred H. Peter. sen, gave his life. Ho was wounded in the battle of Argonne Forest, and died December 19, 19: " -/EPISCOPAL CHURCH troubled dreams, but are assured by a watchful mother that there is no cause for fear or grief—she is beside them, It was in such a manner that this message came to me, and while there have been recurring moments of loneliness, the despair that first attended the knowledge of this friend’s passing was overcome with the feeling that he was near, and that there had been no interruption of life. This could not be cpnmidered a mental , for to be Sone stem patients. who’ h im jails fro sare oe Pe ie fee pase arse, reid: er, Kid- gl ag fe Gland anid ¥e- preve re- fe and vitalising pilance jaye’ trial aes Active Pad JANCH CO. ae: apeisas Cal, there 18 Ufe after KEEPS DIVORCE LAW DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 18—With much 7 opposition than was offered in the last convention, three years ago, the proposal to amend the canon on marriage today was defeat- ed by vote of the clergy and laity of the Protestant Episcopal church here, The proposal would have made it impossible for the clergy to officiate im the marriage of any divorced per son whose husband or wife was still living. After bitter debate, the ma- jority report of the committee on ehanges, recommending against the change, was adopted. had I not received these messages at the time of his passing, instead of several days later, and the reason at once became apparent: we were on different planes of thought, I believ- ing him to be living, while he re alized that he had left the mortal state Of existence, and so when I came to the same understanding 1 was then in a receptive state to re- ceive his communications. ‘When I learned of this friend's de- parture, it became so clear to me that the experience on his part was as tho he were walking along a road when a heavy black shadow was en- countered, but proceeding on bis way he found that, after all, it wae only a shadow with no power to harm him nor intercept his progress, and recognizing it as such, he attained a higher understanding of life. In countless instances the evi- dence of the senses is denied, and be- cause our mortal vision is too ma- jeortal oe een those who have gone on, not disprove the fact that death, 4 SAYS GENERAL Kill Radicalism as You Would Rattlesnake--Wood NEW Yo! t 18—“Kill rad- icaism vald kill @ rattle- snake Wood told a mass meet orkers last night. He noipal speaker at a meeti: ; opened the campaign to rafse $1,000,000 for the perpetu- ation of Col. Theodore Roosevelt's birthplace in New York Fresh from his command at Gary, Ind., Wood said: “Roosevelt stated openty that there was no room in this the red flag. It is against every thing which this country stands for ~—the home, the town, the nation, public morality, private well being, the security of our inetitutions— everything that-we hold most dear. “Kill it as you would kill a rattle- snake, and amash those who follow it, speak for it or support it. They are enemies of the state and danger- ous enemies.” ° Good Job Awaits ° * Burglar in Jail John Mason hopped’ out of the frying pan, miased the fire, and janded in clover in Superior Judge A. W. Frater's court Friday. When Mason pleaded guilty of Burglary, the court sentenced him to one day in the county jail, and W, C, Daw- son & Co., pioneer shippers, prom- ised him a job on his release. He finished serving the sentence in time to spend Saturday night in freedom and will go to work for the Dawson company Monday, He stole three suits from the koom of Oscar Benson, 418 Spring st., eptember 6. + PEDESTRIAN IS HIT Clark Kemmes, U, 8. hotel, t& suffering from severe cuts and bruises Saturday in the ctty hos- pital from being knocked down by an automobile late Friday night at Fourth ave. and Jackson st. The machine was driven by B. H. Boyd, 1433 (16th « ave. Kemmers was about to board a street car when the accident occuurred, country for| Council Adopts Policy in Re- gard to Car Lines Property owners tn the bust mess districts will be required to pay for paving between street car tracks, but the municipal railway must pay for paving its right-of-way in the residence districts, This, in general, will be the pol- icy of the present city council as expressed at a special session of the city council Friday afternoon. An ordinance will be drafted to embody the council's decision. The council's decision was not reached until after a vigorous de bate in which Mayor Fitzgerald, members of the Doard of public works and the full membership of the city council partictpated. Councilman A, T. Drake pointed out that the present street railway revenues are not sufficient to de fray the expense of paving street car right-of-way. “Where will the department ¢et the money?” Drake demanded. “Let them raise the fare if neces- sary,” Councilman R, H. Thomson retorted. “In other cities the fare has been increased in some in- stances to 10 cents. If we've made a mistake in taking over the car lines and trying to run them for nothing it's time we found it out.” Councilman J. E. Carroll said he would much prefer, as a taxpayer, to have the cost of street railway right-of-way paving assessed against the abutting property than to in crease street car fares. Thomson replied that it would be an outrage to assess such cost against abutting property owners to pay for facilities many of them will not use. Carrol retorted that the cost of water mains and other public utili ties are uniformly assessed against abutting property owners and he saw no reason for making an ex: ception of street car right-of-way paving. The council decided that the municipal ratiway department should bear the cost of keeping in repair the paving between tracks, NEW YORK, Oct. 18.—-EBugene V. Debs, head of the socialist party in America. now comfined in the federal prison at Atlanta, Ga., was quoted by the New York Call in an interyeiw today as follows: “If I should get out of this prison HONOR AVIATORS Nearly a score of men famous in American aviation and aeronautics, representing the International Aero- nautical Association, will be guests of honor at a luneheon at the Army and Navy Club next Thursday given by local men interested in the progress of aviation, according to Teel Williams, chairman of the ar- rangements committee. A, J. Rhodes, chairman of the reception committee, will preside at the luncheon, A luncheon previously planned for next Thursday by the local branch of the Roosevelt Memorial Associa- tion has been postponed in order that business men of the city may be free on that ¢»y to entertain the visitors who are coming to size up Seattle as a way station in the pro- posed “round-the-world” aerial derby. ROOSEVELT BIRTHDAY WILL BE HONORED CHICAGO, Oct. 18.—Gov. Lowden today issued a proclamation, desig- nating October 27, former President Roosevelt's birthday, as “American- ization day,” and urging the public to, honor the memory of the ex- president, by “assembling and taking measures fot the Americanization of all the people in their several com munities.” CYCLE AND AUTO COLLIDE, ONE HURT ‘William Lammers, 37, Manhattan apartments, is suffering from a broken arm In the Swedish hospital as the result of a collision Friday night between a motorcycle he was riding and an automobile driven by H. Mitchell, 20, 406 Harrison st., at Queen Anne ave. and Mercer: st. Mitchell was arrested and released on $100 ball burg tomorrow, That is exactly where I belong, and that is exactly where I woulé go. Mr. Palmer and Mr. Wil: son and the capitalists know that perfectly well, and that is why they keep me here. “I am not being kept prisoner here for the speech I made at Canton in June, 1938. fam being kept here for the speech-I would make at Gary or Pasadena Peeved; King Didn’t Stop LOS ANGELES, Cal., Oct. 18.— All Pasadena is “peeved” and Glen- dale, Monrovia, Sierra Madre and way points are ditto today because King Albert didn’t carry out his pro- gram, but instead was whisked thru Pasadena yesterday to his train, while at the Hotel Maryland Gov- ernor Stephens and ‘a party of dignitaries awaited his arrival at a luncheon until the soup got cold. Let's go eat at Boldt's—uptown, 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 2d Ave. ~ AMUSEMENTS PALACE HIP Continuous Daily, 1 te 1% SIX BIG ACTS OF HIPPODROMH VAUDEVILLE Feature Pheteplay BESSIE LOVE in “A Fighting Colleen” ORPHEUM * MOORE (itpnvitin SARANOFF Billy Abbott and Winter Garden Vielin Girls Rm GEMS” ‘COLO: z THR SHARROCKS Lee and Cranston; William Ebs; Emmy and P: Kanazawa Boys. of mfle at A:jotiny When iff was learned that son's car !kad been located in wards” ys froved to be Garrison’s ‘We are gamed for the quality of . Singing, any day pends ¢ n whether

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