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f Anan, P] end united | Press Fervice vat fact. %. i] that By mall, out of city, Se per month; # montha, $1.61 $5.00, Mm the State of Washington, 44.68 for € montha or $9.00 per year, autor Fred C. Brown makes ing statement when he says that the fincipal cause of crime in Seattle is dope. newspaper rill law-abiding 4 the prosecutor does command public tention when he promises to see to it that bpe peddlers are not let go with fines rep- menting a few days’ profits at their hid- traffic or with a week or a month consciencele: ery do idler is a direct agent of a sme for murder, theft and y on a wholesale scale. is, most likely, a shambling, shifty- alien, saturated with his own stock in but the stuff he hands out is the b led killings as the slaying of Dep- Sheriff Scott. ; peal agitation will not lift the menace Ddope from Seattle, but it certainly will ake this city no longer a rendezvous for most dangerous criminals in the United The Seattle Star @ months, 99.75) year, Outside of the state, The per month, By carrier, ity, Dope and Crime States, drawn here because this is the sea- port thru which a majority of contraband dope enters the country. It will help to save the city’s name as a community, S$ marfiacs. The drug traffic constitutes an interna- The charge has not been de- ands of ounces tional scandal. nied that thou factured in the United States, exported to} Japan and from that country systematically distributed thruout China and smuggled back thru Pacific ports into America, The federal government will some day! wake up to the extent of the evil and set) in motion the ponderous machinery that) brings about agreements between nations to| institute reform. : Meanwhile Prosecutor Brown, the police| = and the judges, who do everything within} their power to make drug peddling a haz-| ardous game in Seattle, will be winning the gratitude of the public, THE SEATTLE STAR EVERETT TRUE Published Datty aA suppev the outbreaks of are manu-| mod, It is an Ls advertises America to the world as tmperfectty ctvilized. rs are learning that the mob spirit cannot be argued with | rardiess of the amount of his sub- Po more than a crazed brute can be argued with. last resort is the only recourse tn handling a mob It has ted that any middle course is futile, ly, but it alone cures the fever of a mot . ors, aided by militiamen who can | Public property, courageous governors, White man's 824 for free recreational, exhibition al, civic and public purposes,” «pecial | provision being made to provide pop- ular meeting places therein for all ized veterans’ organizations, In view of the great succes achieved in the Liberty loan and war welfare drives, the proposed financing of this project by popular eabecription seemed entirely frasibie at that time Owing, however, te the change tn the general business situation during the past year, and the growing aver- sion, to mubscription drives, the man |terchurch was due @ chastentng. agement of the association has not | was too much of a plunger. found conditions favorable for the | money too recklessly, and it waa not, and | sufficiently harnessed to church con-| letter? say. +e preach a sermon of terrible force, @ispa: tn one day sang termines the innocence of a negro, lynched | R grand jury in Duluth de stray darkey, benefited by the verdict maddened men who killed the Muth, but of American sentiment and policy. it is a promising indication, here from Gav ernor Bickett,-a machine gun detachment | shoots to kill when a mob attempts to KiGNAD | 4 udjtorium association; thr it | cers and committees, has been active during the past year In gathering In-| but slight relation to the Bideous) formation regarding plans, cost and 0 of auditorium buildings in fail at Durham, N.C, governor of Kentucky established the precedent. show the lynching has which is assumed to be at the bottom of the praction are lynched for all manner of offenses and the mob never! other large cities of the country, in for proof of guilt. 4 impulse from It is the beast, which all iad 19) individual creature, from which we have emerged. has fought down, loosed and ravaging. Dlackest crime of lust and the act of a mob are actentifically amount by popular subscription t | the capital stock, each subscriber to have one vote In the amociation, re- few more machine guna, and the mob habit will subside. will supplant bestial blood-lust. No longer is lynching the shame South; the Northern assumption has been rudely smashed. And it is to the honor of the South f Bouthern governors are arising who hold sacred their pledge to the law. of superiority Letters to Wives land there are men who are writing letters to thetr x to this bachelor lifa The old place is ike » almost afraid of the sound of my own footsteps. cut short your vacation on my account,” ete. etc. become a sort of form latter and the husband who tnforms|it now seems probable the plan will | trol. ‘wife that he is having a fairly carefree life while she is in the! is so rare as to be noteworthy when found. @ frank husband was old fyman of the ith century, Doddridge, an Engtish when his wife was away ‘wrote her a letter so candid that it has been handed down to ity as a classic. | “8 hope, my dear,” wrote Dr. Doddridge, “you will not be of- A when I tell you that I am very casy and happy without | “My days begin, pass and end in pleasure, and seem short be they are so delightful. “I often think of you and pray for you and bless God on your ; yet I am not at all anxious for your return, of, indeed, anything else. And the reason, the great and sufficient rea- is, that I have more of the presence of God with me than Femember ever to have enjoyed in any month of my life. fs not recorded what Mra. Doddridge wrote in reply, m, it can be imagined that she would have liked to be missed @ little bit. Did the excelient plety of her husband compensate her for his lack anxiety about her coming back, for, as he wrote, “I am not at all about your return”? Madam, what would your reply be if your husband wrote you such Some Day to heat your house all winter. ‘Ome ton of coal hing to do with the devil Use Your Toes Girls, this is intended for you. / Can you pick up a pencil with your toes? At you can, you walk correctly. you walk correctly you wear “sensfble shoes.” McCoy, physical director of Cin | Miss McCoy is advocating a “sensible shoe peel Ee spac ag ¥ | “Lifting a pencil with the toes—the tom pressing th of | ball of the foot—shows that the owner of gp le rerr ag ising all the muscles and making them strong,” says Misa McCoy. If they carry don't, take a look at your shoes—are they “sensible”? 4 ‘Then it ought to be easy walking correctly. | @ stepping-stone and housew: [Bo speaketh Miss Ruth f those toes walks properly, your toes. Walking correctly physical beauty, good health, excellence in ath- orl half «@ gale should descend upon the sleck racing machines 2 onal cup race. From the halibut fleet comes an ungentlemanly are two solutions of the Japanese problem. -One of them 4s for inhabitants to double on the trail of our pioncers and leave the slope to the Oriental brethren. Belief that crooks maintain high ideals of loyalty among themaelves Par with the notion that every prohébitionist has a cellar full of quenttty of suger has been found in a freight fam. And the @ monopoly on jams. a August tet ts election day in Mexico. Look for casualties and returns | few doys tater. ‘ef seve apply the treaty before revising & Probably he means an antidote to revive the treaty. nt ‘Letters to the | Editor— Write briefly. Use ink or typewriter, One skte of paper only. Sign your nama |SEATTLE'S NEED |OF AN AUDITORIUM Editor ‘The Star: The Memorial a cireus employe, is dead and tn his grave, and not | But it stands as an indictment, not youth, not of the officials of | vewtigating available suitable aites, humanity nor American citizenship is to be judged by the and studying the most feasitie meth the remote | od of raising the required funda, ‘The Seattle plan, initiated early tn 19, contemplated raising the entire vaQroads | | hear anyone these days singing “Irdand Must Be Heaven.” | Dr. James L Vance Writes for The Star Today on The “Interchurch” scription, the ansociation to construct been |the building and turn it over to the Hot lead is a desperate | city of Seattle and county of King for operation and maintenance am a “for free assembly what the haughty waiter brings him. BY DR. JAMES I. VANCE He cannot have one lamb chop; he Founder of the Interchurch World Movement and Chairman ef @he | must order three, because three is Federal Council ef Churches of Christ in America “an order.” LHOM, Lr re ecm i epost ame 5% and Safet jeneth,” is Scripture from| must do team work. Sectarian eel-| A04 peryous Prowrution becktas by which the Interchureh World Move-|fisahness and denominational friction | ment should draw some comfort juat| must ceage, The idea is sublime, It It i being chastened. Let us is divine. It must go on. hope that the ehastening is of the| But even at for “no chastening for the Present seemeth to be joyous, but neverthelens, afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of right- ousnera unto them cleed thereby.” If the medictne werks Qrus on the Interchurch, the great movernent for & unified and cooperative chureh to America may live to thank God for chastisement administered thru them will prove a blessing. Already the Interchurch Movement ts» being re organized on @ conservative basta. ‘The stream i# flowing in the right direction. It merely got out of its banks for awhile, But you cannot down its waters, for this stream of & unlfled and cooperating church i9/8"4 ypstrame State Supervision, i the river of God. whe are exer- Bolte French putrycade Puget Sound Savings 2 It must be a@mitted that the In |auditorium subscription drive, have to be modified to provide for | | financing the site and building by @iscover that there was some excuse for all of this, The movement was! It had a big task, and the time Money was spent, but had the objectives sought been | ~~ 000 has been offered to the associa-|obtained, the criticism would change | tion, Mr. Eben 8. Oxborne, in charge to cheers, of the fund, being one of the trustees | of the association. A considerabie amount of the cap-|to do something. ital stock of the association has been | est, most daring, most audacious at- subscribed, and several hundred dol.|tempt men have | lars paid into the treasury, none of |Christ literally at translate His program organization |One wonders whether it is blame or | praine that falle from His lips. Even the critics of the Interchurch inadequacy and unsuttable|have no criticism for the great idea | Mess of the largest auditoriums now available in Seattle are emphasized | movernent on every occasion of a visit from |churches are absolutely unantmous notables, such an the president and | A On when not| fered by the principal musical organ- one-fourth of the number of persons | izationa, A muffictent auditorium is applying for admission could enter | urgently needed to accommodate the students of our public schools for commencement exercises and recit- M. B. McBRIDE, Hut a little honest reflection the city, county or state, or all three, ithe memorial features to be financed | new. by popular subscription. The James Osborne fund of $100, waa all too abort. mistakes the Interchurch made were in the direction of trying It was the sublim- His word and| expenses of the having been met by donations from of cooperation around* which the Arena or the Armory. ‘Thru this lack of a sufficient and |'Proper auditorium, the community ts | als. It should | largely deprived of the enjoyment of | Secretary Roard of Directors, Audl- twelve and one-half times as much energy as man has ag|‘"® concerts, operas and recitals of: een able to get from it. - ~* ‘The average efficiency of coal for heating, whether to keep folks or to be transmitted into power, is only 8 per cent, combustion And this after at least three centuries of more or less tant research and endeavor to make the crystallized heat o’ the work harder. | |The attempt to find a procesn of transmuting coal directly into heat been one of the most alluring in practical science. Engineers are incessantly digging after the secret, as they have been since the when chemistry was alchemy and physics was thought to have One day it will be found, discovered will be successively hated and hailed for turning the = of things industrial upside down. | Meanwhile dig down in your jeans for some $14.75 @ ton for coal, don't smile too broadly at the coal man. Your laugh may be ing, but he’s getting his right now. | torium Association, Inc, —By CONDO WELL, LOOK AT =lour new sper —! Doctor Frank Putas ove” || CRANE'S Today's Bent Bet: If we can't have weich. 100 per cent Americanism, let us eee j Suir ¢ have 2.75 per cent, They claim that a bratn worken— we -riee.! aily Article eee poets and such—seldom eat meat. “Yep, they christened the new Cuba| We know that they seldom mee@t Can du Pont Cook? | Pannen ship with Bevo." cats. ay | ny?” He Can! P | “Because tt would be near beer| A man doesn't fo around tm Wie ® Coffee, Flapjacks. élity voce, ondeag?? sitet saevie ‘very othe REGGE oe can't afford a coat. Sacred Breakfas (Copyr' Mir Thornas Lipton comes across to| It's because he can't very-often ave met a cup—while lots of our men are | ford 4 new silk shirt | i. a | going to his country to get a giana, gh 8 When General du Pont, Mr. Daugh eee “Honesty i the best potley™ thee erty, Howard Mannington, I. W.| Zapton made his fortune tn tea;/cause one can't keep & movi 4¢ |Henley, Henry 1. Stoddard and Jens| now he's spending it in water, o's always Hein.’ |W. Smith arrived in Marion the] > an nok ripe A on ook ont npeed alwryn mbtmg other day to dincum the political) ae Sv See, oe 4 segfidy>dnt ways get the girl | time ends up by doing time, wituation, may the news dispatches! «1 now it; I've looked at them all | 7 aoe they entered the Marion club, hun-| my jito,” avy for breakfast. Marion is @ city|” ee cg “Skirts take another of homes and breakfast is a sacred LIARS WE HAVE HRARD . meal, Club life here does not begin! eyep, Peary ma; Good heavens! What next? juntil later in the day, when business | perth poles bes ui , eee "o| ‘on neo! tC | oon oxy? men drop in for luncheon and din-| Of, could wae on jeodtorge in | Wonder how the seat of goverm nor. Consequently there ts no ar-| the commer "taane th Ciesicle evn |ment would iook in overalls? SSS] rangement for serving breakfast at | frose up and fell on the gropnd betore | +6 ‘ | they ached my wire, Then in the sam (he Marion club ‘ bay Bes frie eed means & When Jess Sextth wants brenkinet | Sta gee ee sane en Mey | gen et meas one he craves it, and he returned from a| meenng | reconnaixance in the club kitchen | “ede with loud lamentations Unat food was mei there, but no chef. “iow did you ever manage to hang “What's the use of a man being a| mires on it. and G14 the lndiags Get hotel owner if he can’t cook? Gen- eral du Pont usked, as he pulled off his coat and rolled up his sleeves. | “Show me the kitchen. The rest of| jyou keep out apd ret the table.” ne get down I ag Re uae In a few minutes there was steam |® match—Her! where you - from the coffee pot, ham and eggs | Dt 78s believe my etry 2” ye were sputtering in the pan, and flap} ane dope fiends that loaf around a” Jacks flew thru the air. Later Gen-| geattie have the following proverb eee |! du Pont staggered thru the) tora motto: “While there's life there’s| Now there ts a book out entite@ <]| Kitchen door with a breakfast tray | pop “Mandie’s Mandate.” No, it isn't » eee . eel 20m case camo tate cxart tho <iaw: Dis Mond wee the first on the stand. The jadge asked her her name, and the jurors, It was dismissed, er rather missed. balanced on his palm and a napkin eee date book. Mandate sounds suspio hung over one arm. Yen, = fat woman has her own! tous, doesn't it? It i} “Come and get it,” announced the|__*o™ ® ft td nr MY ceneral. And they did. All of which leads to remark that|roand steak, for instance, wo ft will{do things with toasted cheese? I the man who doés not kndw how to|be as tender and taste as good as| speak of deep matters. As Einstein jcook, be he millionaire, prince or | *Pring chicken? Do you know the/| said, “Only half a dozen living men | Dishop, misses a lot. secrets of beaten biscuit? Can you| probably can understand mé.” ‘The preparation of food is one of = the simple, primal joys of existence. | Eating is fun, but cooking things to eat, netting the table, brewing cof- |for, making biscuit, and putting up | the chairs have a subtler appeal. ‘There in no unfortunate wretch on earth who deserves more sympathy than the poor duffer who is com- pelled to resort constantly to restau- rants and hotela.. He must take | |fury, whereby men dig thelr graves | with their teeth. He is overcharged, enubbed and sneered at by the gentleman from| | the walters’ union who brings him hia food. He never gete what he wants when and how he wants ft. He goes to an early grave, buMed, taxed, starved and buttled to death; he passes out unwépt, unhonored ‘For nineteen years we have paid never less than a 5% divi- dend on the savings of our mem- bers and every dollar is assured the double safety of conserva- tive management and Strict The criticon were needed, and the! Bacon and a loaf, “and thou beside oan Association. Where Pike Street Crosses Third! sockets of a bill of fare. Mr. du Pont, when you sald, “Show | Valu sli MG me the kitchen,” and afterwards y | ‘ NW ° TABLETS- WN “Come and get it,” you mid a mouth-| ful. I'l forgive your dollara, You NR Tomot!- [TREE have nense. ; , Still, I think T could show you a ERRKRRE ME MIEEEEGEN few tricks. Do you know how to fix Talk about uality— Camels are there and then some! een appreciate what quality means when you smoke Camel cigarettes! Their flavor and fragrance and mellow mildness are as new to you as they are delightful! Your preference for Camels is due not only to quality but to Camels expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos and you will greatly prefer Camels blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight. Camels are distinctly refreshing and never tire your taste! They leave no unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste nor unpleasant ciga- retty odor! CompareCamels withany, cigarette in the world at any price! Camels are sold everywhere in scientifically sealed packages of 20 cigarettes for 20 cents; or ten pack- ages (200 cigarettes) in a glassine-paper-covered carton. Westrongly recommend thiscartonfor the home or officesupply or when you travel, R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, 1-7-2 + 5 TT