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a Mr. Buck’s Official Report | Mr. L. W. Buék, secretary of the state federation of labor, should be sure of his facts and entirely fair when speaking as an official of organized labor, else he but adds to the hysteria wave. In a statement issued to his organization Mr. Buck implies that the other Seattle papers were in a conspiracy to bring about the suppression of the labor paper. His evidence: First, “because one publisher was seen talking with the district attorney.” Secondly, “because the P.-I. came out the day of the raid with a vicious editorial attack against the labor paper.” And thirdly, “because The Seattle Star and The Tacoma Times printed the story before the raid took place,” Just a little investigation would have given Mr. Buck some facts we know of. He could have found out easily that the first afternoon edition of The Star was on the street without any mention of the raid simply because The Star didn’t know up to press time of any intended raid. He could have found out that the issuance of the warrants was announced in Tacoma and that The Star obtained the story from Tacoma, from The Tacoma Times, by long dis tance telephone in time for the second afternoon or first pink edition. The Star knew nothing whatever about the matter in ad- vance. As soon as the telephoned bulletin reached us from Tacoma we had it confirmed by both the Tacoma and the Seattle office af the United States District Attorney and | then we printed it just as we would any other news. 7 The Star doesn’t know anything about what the other f publishers knew or did on this particular day. With thi exception: We do know that the one-half of that P.-I ' editorial, which Mr. Buck offers as proof of the conspiracy was devoted to some rather bitter and hysterical, if no Vicious, remarks about The Star. Mr. Buck did not see fil mention this rather significant fact—significant, isn’t when one alleged conspirator attacks another ?— » surely if Mr. Buck’s report is to be official, it should | | wise be correct and complete. In her campaign for parliament, Lady Astor said: “I believe in prohibition, but not in forced prohibition, just as I believe in Christianity, but not in forced Christian- ity. Forced Christianity and forced prohibition both make hypocrites.” Lady Astor has brains as well as money. Such Is Life James Deaver, accused of killing the man who he says} stole his wife, sat thru his trial without particular emotion. Even when directly accused, albeit thru a question, by Prosecuting Attorney John D. Carmody, Deaver, emphatic, was not excited or rattled or shaken. The ex-marine sat thru his trial exhibiting the same! amount of interest that a live wire might evince during i Se epee ce om era DON'T You WANT THAT HUNK or pe |AS Ju ways draug may t fever, | dineas The borne dineas canes mals water from ee tenting of a consular report from Patagonia. Deaver appeared a victim of ennui while on trial for his life. * * * © * * ‘A number of women seemed to appreciate the finer shad- of the trial with a far greater degree of interest. hen one woman witness retailed the story of meetings Holt and Mrs. Deaver. These fair damsels leaned eyes wide open. The woman's testimony was rel- with the same appreciation that a Lucullus might dis- when the viands were spread before him. And when woman who tended Holt’s store finished her story, these) ‘women sighed contentedly. - Sueh is life! a The world will come to an end the middle of next month, according to one of our alert star gazers. That's cheering. A lot of us won't need any more, coal, A Considerable Change | The mere dropping out of a line of type from The Star's one editorial of yesterday made a sentence read as} “The public’s confidence in labor built as it has been on a =) solid foundation cannot be swept away by a ruthless un- } reasoning policy.” It was written and it should have read this way: > “The public’s confidence in labor built as it has been on a » solid foundation cannot be swept away by a mistake or two. | It can, however, be wiped out by a ruthless unreasoning | policy on the part of labor.” _ Our old friend Typographical Error is still on the job. waste trom water. forma: more water. eral b refere: stock Of all the reds—and there are several varieties—the damndest reds are those cowardly reds who believe in all the I. W. W. doctrines but who haven't enough red blood in their veins to come out in the open. Just a Seattle Factory Girl | i r Down at Black’s overall factory, we are told, an Italian 5 ¢ hums Italian opera music all day at her sewing ma- ine. Hers is a rich heritage from the shores of the Mediter- Tanean, where for centuries the world’s emotions have been translated into rhythmic sounds—some soft as the winds _ that sweep sun-kissed shores, and some mighty as the storm waves. We, in American, have perhaps been too busy building ® great industrial republic to give proper time to the bless- ings of the arts. Yet the time is surely coming when our children will Tespond to the best in music. The opportunity is at hand. Seattle has a symphony | orchestra endeavoring to interpret the symphonic poems of the masters who have written their stories in music. This organization, endowed because we are not yet able to give adequate popular support, is playing a series of - concerts in Meany hall, on the University campus. There} | are too many empty seats in the great auditorium on these occasions. Why not fill more of them. By the way there’s a ef symphony concert out there tonight. It’s queer. i But as the price of sugar advances, the “shortage” disappears. Seattle fair price committee take notice. “Consumers’ League Wants Clothing Standardized,” says headline. That's what Rockefeller did to the gaso- line supply, and now look at the price. * S eaking of new laws, why can’t we have a hobo- hibition act? SS nee One NGITHGR Does ANYBOPT SCL86 1 —— AND WHEN THAT possibly fatal illness from typhold| personages have dertved great bene-| bodies of persona afflicted with those | Yery wealthy who have « private @ide the body and do not originate spontaneously in nature. the germa which get into drinking | ter, © human beings and antmals away the water free from disease germs. The most common form of sup ply is the shallow well, into @ layer of earth saturated with flowing streams, except in limestone | face for a radius of sometimes sev- portance. Other that ls not water-tight . exercise in the open alr, is makes it unlawful to p CHSWING GUM Wouldn't you he A groat nuisance half-soled every t . MANY A TRE ACE end Ute (la) I Thanksgiving ginger ale o pe the limit © in thy kick? ding, where is thy oe Sliver is selling at so that the silver worth more before { after in paper oe When D’‘Annunz Paris to Italy he lef other things, 160 nm STUPE 1S GLUSD To THE SOLE CF A RSBON'S SHO® (T'S ACMOST AS PLOASANT HAVING IT MATTED IN YOUR HAIR— kerehiefs, 41 kimoni st Uke THAT Itt — broldered nightgowns than that. has upset #0 ciples, an ach: Great Britain says haa written @ book night? Mr, and Mrs. Br & three-year visit her ‘Kewanee (Il) . How wet or dr Nobody knows Star . o- Paderewnkt's fall | Poland is said to b ing, as he gave all $1,000,000 to bis co | woes to show that harmony out of . IMPURE WATER Clear, sparkling water ts not al-|when taken as part of some other | pure water, A refreshing | work or play activity, is preferabie. ht from “the old oaken bucket”|Golf of course is almost ideal b@ the beginning of @ long and/ recent years a number of prominent) no slacker.” | o- cholera or other | fit from chopping wood. One char °. acter much In the public eye seems germs of the so-called water. | to have preferred sawing down trees, diseases come from the | but the lateer is restricted to the dysentery, | fist annual dance, ploes of the Bartem forest at their disposal. Those who are interested should write to the a. They do not live long out ing, and, Lapper, on A teow dix | Public Health Service for an inter. seconded are communicated from ani. | esting reprint entitled “Exercise and to man, but for the most part| Health.” Address Information Edi 1, 8 Public Health Bervice, Washington, D. C. | thanks —Quiney, Il, ce and produce disease come only buman belongs, If we keep the Products from the bodies of im jetter? Burleson w: “fin” tn December, 1918, and has| | been suffering with stomach trouble) ever aince, He appears to be get ting weaker and is losing fresh. What can I give him to bufld him up? He ts 48 years old. A. It ts practically imponsfble for the bureau to give you definite as | sistance In the case you describe in our water supplies, we keep reaching Few of these are fed by fealty of King Joho tions, and they are really little . , than reservoirs for “surface |YOUF letter. Experience with pre. |Lincoin ” Since they @rain the gur.|“!9Us epidemics of influenza has! In 1586, on Novem! shown that the convalescence from ended feet ir location with | t# disease is often very prolonged. | of by Lord eco te otab! outhouses and|At the same time it is rather sus-| Potheringay pens ie @ matter of prime im-|Dicious that your father should still] 6, november 23, sources of |D* Suffering from stomach trouble we} | following an attack of “flu” in De wr jcember, 1918, With a person 48 jyears of age, chronic stomach trouble, ansociated with weakness, | le fon are a leaky or loose defective curb, or a cx embarked from the o——— egg | should led to a very searching ox on Nov QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS “mination to make sure that the Maine, b: xn — -—— —— | patient ts not afflicted with cancer ae te Q. Do you recommend calisthenics | or some other serious allment. You | Prot e Ma keep fit? | will understand, however, that this |0PY. It formed {tel A. Bystematic calisthentes are un-| bureau cannot assist you any further /PaMed Yorkshire ar doubtedly of value, but most exper-|in arriving at a correct diagnosis |t the neral court fenced health auth 4 that|and that your father should consult) On November 22, feradle.|a reliable physician and submit to ation sh any- ‘careful examination at his hands. took pl THE PRICE Your protection When the price of an article is shown on the label you know what that article should cost you. When you buy BAKING POWDER 5 Ounces for 2 5 you have the manufacturer’s guarantee on quality and price. ‘It’s the same now as before and during the war. Our Government Bought Millicns of Pounds. president of the Re greatest in human thoug! morning for Los Angeles, © In| “My business may be slack, but I'm SURVIVORS OF AN OLD ORDER The clerk read an invitation ex tended the aldermen to attend the| fern Ragies’ hall, after the cour motion of Geers, the motion was accepted with But what's the use ef writing a it My father had an attack of| more than half the time, | Calvert, brother of Lord Baltimore, Inle of Wight! co between the United States brig Vixen, with 14 guns and OUNCES ty, THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1919. TOLD BY ent. plum pudd mince n On ri headache? . $1.30 an ounce in it in . fo . went kt Many « in the United States has been beaten for counciiman for @ great deal leas Newton's prin ent which in Albert on the mubject, here are not more than | persons in the world who| nd it. Therefore it is @ waste} of time for us to ai Boy, where is Charlie Chaplin to = it. MAYBE THEY DON'T LIKE THE | CLIMATE rerson le © with Courter . y we are Mow wet or ary we are! aa premier of |* ¢ near, and he may have to go back to piano play { his fortune of untry, It only ‘* easier to get under the aus ders’ league I meet rman Alderman by Herald, . on't deliver | Q\N November 22, tn 1200, the king| of Scots performed of England at) the act of ber 22, sentence of death wan read t 0 Mary, Queen Buckhurst at 1633, Leonard for Amefica with @ following of 200| families to settle Maryland ember 22, the ¥ request of its ken under the mchunetts col-| { into » A ment dep @t Boston in 1812, an ac dollar is ined than Ask the boss to pay you off from the society of ef the ‘ of the lecture curse. | Root beer in mince «| dow, | The curse of this country is extravagance. We are the most wasteful folk on We won the war on a program of reckle: eanon aia| unlimited, So that gigantically j kimped and saved a while during the war | ure, |signed we went at our It looks as tho it would be a autet! towing money hilariously out of the win- | dumping it into the garbage can and making bonfires of twenty dollar bills in the plum pud-/ back yard, so to speak. Workmen, getting fatter pay than they lever had in their, lives, did not save it, but started out to buy talking machines, new | rugs, better clothes for ma and the girls and a flivver for all. And the rich outpaced them. — E |more idiotic, plain, damfool spending going lon right now than ever before. | Luxuries are in greater demand now than ever before in the history of the United expensive | and silk shirts are selling faster than | 8 can get them. “People who bought fur coats worth $200 before the war spend as much as $900 for | “That does | gnify that prices have gone up; it means that people are willing to pay for | a higher class article. five times as many fur coats as before. “What is more, people will pay spot cash. sel furs on | credit; now the buyer seems to have the Most of the time he is a man who | |never would have thought of buying such | a thing in the old days.” | pre States. fur deale money, anos than voters. lin But, as the coal dealer remarked, | ‘" and they bad 40,000 tenants. | In 1821 Gern uence In 1897, ties were them now,” not merely Tt used The! as captured, and tenant Reed, her commander, was taken to family which led from @ prosperous weaver. fortune founded by the weaver an estor grew with ne faimiy gained land, spread out 440 square miles,| * BY DR. (Copyright, arth. 3ut as soon as the armistice w favorite sport aga There Diamonds, limousines, aid a fur dealer, to be necessary Ww Criminal Waste 1919, mountainous waste, f Trade. the government might waste “Everybody wants platinum jewelry,” said and wholesale, individuals | Mr. Backus. “We can't find enough large And we are selling | FRANK CRANE by Frank Crane) {| The demand for jewe far in advanee of the ly, according to F. C. Backug, 8, | secretary of the National Jewelers’ Board 0 and exp come in.” Why not? If they have the money may they not do as they please with it? A thousand times—NO You have a legal right to light your cigap with a thousand dollar bill. But if you do so you are a criminal waster in the eyes of any right-minded person Think of the sheer wickedness of it, when there are eleven million children in the United States without schooling; When vast populations in Europe and Asia are starving and freezing; When thousands of human lives around you might be strengthened and brightened by the money that goes into your furs, diamonds and limousines! There's something rotten in a people that can waste joyously, without a qualm of com science. To say nothing of its viciousness, how disgusting it is! You didn’t think? You never. knew? Didn't you ever read Thomas Hood's | poem, where the dying wastrel rich man | Bays: “The wounds I might have healed, The human sorrow and smart! And yet it was never in my mind To play so ill a part! But evil is wrought by want of thought, As well aa by want of heart ive stone to fill the orders that as in, is You didn’t realize? frigate | on November i er, Prince of Babenhau-| } Me was one of a great) ¢ was descend-| } } | The! great raj Their property at | on November 22 published concerning an/ certain epidemic of yellow fever that was| Your stomach aweeping demic of yellow fever in try }8t. Cecilia, 446 of which were| You feel uncomfortable, when you appointment! Pape's This was the last great epi. belch gases, acids or raise sour, un- tastes like candy and @ box of this this ecu ested food. When you feel|world-famous indigestion relief * of indigestion pain, heart-|comts so little at drug stores November 22 is the feast day of UTP oF headache, from acidity, Diapepsin helps neutralize ‘ 4 or) Just eat a tablet of Pape's Diapep-| stomach acids so you can eat wil music, the south reported 4,264 eases in south-| Missineippl United 8 ‘The | mustn't injure When your tow. the patron saint sin and the Here’s where honestly made shoes prove their value; day in and day out, whether it rains or shines, they’re getting hard usage. We've made the BONE-DRY shoe for hard work—Oak Tan Soles—finest heavy leather— best of workmanship, and if it costs you a little bit more, you get it back many times over in long wear and solid comfort. Stop in at any of the stores listed below and see for yourself the kind of shoe you get LOOK FOR THE NAME ‘BONEDRY ON EVERY SOLE when you buy the BONE-DRY. BONE-DRY SHOE MFG. CO. Seattle, Wash. Sold by atoren) + 103 Firat Ave. 8, Pearce ‘om. (twe stores) Colman n Main St, + 1900 Second Ave BONEDRY Shoe Dressing Preserves Shoes and Leather |; At once!—‘*Pape’s Diapepsin’’ corrects your Sour, Gassy, Acid Stomach—Relief awaits youl You don't want a slow remedy! gone. statio.| when your stemach is bad or an un one—or INDIGESTION ZA Millions of people know the magie of Pape’s Diapepsin as an antacid, They know that indigestion end Gisordered stomach are so needless, The relief comes quickly, no die- ® harmful one— (@:00 valuable; you it with drastic drugs meals don't fit and stomach distress is! out fear. Bernhard’s Shoe Store, L. C. Smith Bids. Peterson Shoe Store, 1331 First Ave. Horseshoe Clothing Co. 1331 First Ave. 5. and Main St. A. Armston, lowa Ave. at Riverside