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out of city, 806 per month; # montha, $1.60; @ months, 62.7 r in the ot Was Ovtaide of the state, Tho per mi My casrier, city, 120 per week, Street Car Fares Despite jitney competition in Seattle, the municipal railway has managed to five its patrons the most reasonable fare in the Northwest. % “Under private management, Tacoma’s new schedule is an eight-cent fare— ded the patron buys 25 tickets in advance for $2.00. Single fares will be n ts. Compared to this, Seattle has much reason to congratu- \ | late itself on a fare that is but a fraction over 6 cents. | Tacoma, it should be remembered, has no jitney problem. )| There the cream of the railway business is not gobbled up |by jitneys as in Seattle. Were the jitneys eliminated in | Seattle, as they are in Tacoma, and as they are in other * | citie it is a safe prediction that Seattle would soon return | to the five-cent fare. ors to the It is estimated the jitneys receive about $2,000 a day. a Even with half that sum in added revenue, the municipal sed railway would be sailing along in fine fashion. driefty. What the fate of the jitneys in Seattle will be is con- ink or typeroriter. aide of paper only. | thee, and shew thee and mighty things, jectural. They are like Finnegan—on again and off again, your name. But, even with them, Seattle's municipal line gives better service at a lower rate than Tacoma’s private line without them. ‘again the problem of “keeping The Negro and the Jap Off the streets.” That (his) prank Terrace, of Orillia, farmer, would lift the bars for Orientals, He community responsibility 45/ would populate the Coast with Japs to the number of ene million, he told S@e clear in suggested standards! +4 congressional committee in Seattle yesterday, They are needed to B ehildren’s play published in pocisim the logmed-off lands, to raise garden truck, to do various farm of Child Welfare” by the | work that Americans are lathe to do, he asserted. He painted a pathetic Ye bureau of the United) picture of a hungry, starving Seattle if there were no Japs here. For, Be department of labor. These ne asked, who would do the work? Cover in detail the subject) are Terrace sees only the immediate advantage of @ million Japa, CHILDREN STREET The Star: Vacation days future similar standards Will | ii. ciches sed out for rural children, 1) was the Immediate advantages of negro labor, as Congressman Box need for wholesome recreation | 111. pointed out, that flooded the Southern states with the Diack race. eesey or any ontia y Who would do the work, if not the black man? was the question of the need of city childre . colonista. standards Oy conse ny ‘They saw only the immediate harvest, the immediate gain, the immedi ate shekels. Nee nou iid the inmuce this | They did not look into the future. They ait not see the welter of blood , 0 endl iid. ‘To insure this. and heartaches, the ghastliness of brother slaying brother, that resulted ae should be a playground w from unrestricted importation of an allen race. tor of a mile of rai ie paid, what a price it is still paying, for the injection of a people amongst ers ctnes, one within us who cannot be assimilated, The history of the negro in the South would seem to point clearly against toying with‘ another race problem. Until we shall have found a satisfactory solution to the negro problem, until we shall have found that great brotherly love which would put the negro on a firm footing, why theorize about the possibilities of the white and yellow races living side by side In perfect amity and accord? We have one race problem in the United States. It ts folly to invite another, even tho we grant, for the sake of the argument, that we could find an Immediate monetary gain thereby. No money in all the world can ever pay for the tears and the sacrifices of the civil war. You Have No Right to Happiness Has man a right to happiness? Not according to the Fathers. Of some sort, and special em-} The American credo is for “tife, on team games for girls is ree} ness." Notice the “pursuit.” i The word is no accident. lack of funds makes it nec-| T. Jefferson was a philosopher as well as a statesman. He perceived that man does not achieve happiness, He only pursues it. If he overtook it, he would be deprived of the joy of the chase. The constancy of this pursuit is the distinguishing feature of man's nature. It differentiates him from the brute, It ts the ring of his ambition. It ts the impulse of all. progresa. Not only does it govern man’s earthly career, but {t shapes his con- ception of his future life. Not being able to acquire happiness here, he invents ft yonder, The Indian had his Happy Hunting Ground. . The Norseman constructed Valhalla, The Hebrew dreamed his Heaven. The Hindu conceived Nirvaga, Maybe they are all wrong. . Perhaps a place of perfect happiness is not only impossible. Perhaps {t is undesirable. For, allowing that arrow never misses its mark in the Happy Hunt ing Ground, that there ts eternal feasting in the halla of Valhalla, that a harp and a crown awaits us in Heaven and that Nirvana is blissful selflessness, what then? Does man pant for thia place of perfect happiness? Does he covet immediate passage? Not he. He sticks where he is to the last minute, for here he knows there is the zest of PURSUIT. A Matter of Great Importance Fewgdances are popular long. The waltz is an exception. It invented in France, greatly modified in Germany, and introduced America from England about 1812. Millions have been learning the one-step and fox-trot. Some trained several years at it. Finally they achieved such proficiency that dancing no longer w toil that twisted their faces and kept them counting in desperate centration .of mental effort. “At last!’ they cried. “we've got itr Now comes the prediction that these dances are to be displaced by a new dance introduced at the recent international conference of dancing teachers at Paris. It’s called the tchega. The new dance is slow, Very Spanish! Also difficult! Of course, it may not become famots after all. But the reports are alarming to those whose skill in the two-step and similar dances was recently acquired, at great cost of time, patience, coin and effort Thoee who learn all the new dances find much of their effort is wasted, better off. boy old enough to One acre to serve n ts advised as a minimum Of space. This genera! play- should not be used for games @ great deal of space. Hase- | football, tennis and similar gs should be provided for by an field containing about six play, the standards warn, De carefully directed, and vie games should be followed by tones. Every child over 10 years have a chance to play on Uberty and the pursuit of happl- has Playgrounds are they lack the in- of real leadership, while alleys and streets are crowded children. The interesting sug fs made that children be into groups of from eight to “with a gang leader self- and self.propagating as in 9 Old neighborhood type of mang.” |B. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR CHILDR "'S BUREAU be eee The Star: I want to com- you on the common sense truthful editorial appearing on ‘six of last night's Star, entitled, Dangers of Fiying.” of all danger in fly- when they alight. For this the commissioners selected Point, on Lake Washington. experienced navigator of weil as Mr. W. E. Boeing, many thousands of dollars im an air and seaplane Plant in this city, fe unanimous in pronouncing Point on Lake Washington one f the safest and most easily located . sites to be found anywhere 4 United States. ‘want to thank The Star for the support given this move- Ment from its inception, and I feel that if our people will put the proper effort the United government will establish ‘® great sea and air plane base the Pacific Northwest. CLAUDE ©. RAMSAY, County Commissioner. . wan into con. then quick, with much stamping of feet Fost! ‘nb f "S a hard life! One-Way Cargoes Over 3,000 tons of manufactured steel has been exported on an average each month from northern Pacifie American ports to the Far East. It has been conveyed across the Pacific foreign ships, Re- cently, when the Jones shipping bill went into effect, these steamships |AVID WARNED AGAINST THIS shall never forget the look on face when she found me in her A” said the plainiy-dressed wom transferred from American to Canadian Pacific porta, ‘were evidently sitting in the} Admiral Benson promptly said that he would send United States Mt of the scornful,” remarked her! shipping board vessels up there to handle this freight. The trouble Boston Transcript. Benson admits, that the American ships are not suc- cessful so far in getting return cargoes from the Far East to the United States. Of course it does not pay to run a ship across the Pacific and back with a cargo only one why. is, as Admiral SAVED tried to buy some rope to 8 profiteer.” Well?” the dealer wanted too much it.”—Philadelphia Reformed Messenger. a Canac transcontinental lines of this an idea, unfortunately, line % would deprive American railroad lucrative tonnage. The average man living inland has that what happens on the high seas doen not concern him very much. As a matter of fact, according to Admiral Benson, this steel tonnage must continue to go across the continent on American railr lines because otherwise there will be “increased costs of the transportation of foodstuffs between the West and the cen ters of population” in the Central West and Kast. _ ENTHUSIASTIC PRAISE far away from salt water. Admiral Benson thinks that if American ships cannot get return cargoes from Far Eastern ports to the United States, congress could enact still further laws to bring this about. this about. The admiral’s faith in the potency af laws ts really admirable, Allied statesmen are mecting at Boulogne to talk over the Polish-Russian situation. Diplomacy going to the dogs? Looks like the garbage bill has hit the waste basket. King county prisoners have cut 1,100 corda of wood this year, Guess that'll make Bill Hohenzollern sit up and take notice Governor Coolidge Wes in a house he rents for $82.50. @ pull of some kind, He must have | Ja7. ne Tonsils—You've heard my sing. Don't you think @ ubout ready for a public ap “I am out of politics,” says General Wood. This is like telling an old joke twice. The majority of women have nerves—and that is what it takes to wear the new styles. Impresario—Certainly, mad- thought as I listened to her Pretty soon there'll be as many pendlaatel er sheriff as for governor. @ fine movie actress she'd By using starters, all the “kicks” have been taken out of Far4~ ¢ reereation for city chil-| oolies who would work long hours for little wages, supplying the wanted | B only, but it is hoped that in’. power on the farm, helping the farmer reclaim lands and adding to What a price this nation! Assuming now that the steel tonnage should cross the continent on/| So what happens on the seas is of direct interest to a man living! GOOD MORNING, NS OWL YOUR WIND= MILL eVERVBODY IN THE BLOCKS HBOR, I've c IT’S A NUISANCS 'T SQUEAKS DAY THE SEATTLE STAR EVERETT TRUE— Dig Writes for The BY ARTHUR CAPPER U. 8S. Senator From Kansas, “Law-breaking” by the courts has become a serious problem. T check and balance system of govern ment, framed by the forefathers who wrote our constitution, is being de stroyed. The courts, from the justice-of-the peace up, are usurping the legisla tive functions of our government in a fashion never contemplated by those who wrote o constitution. It is being done in the name of the constitution. We are indignant, and justly so, at the autocratic assumption of the powers of congress by the chief ex ecutive, But the courts of this coun- try have been “breaking laws,” and in effect “making laws,” to @ far greater extent than has the expou- tive, except in @ very few instances. Examples are numerous. Woolen goods are not clothing In the mean ing of the Lever act, a Massachu setts federal judge decides, There fore, this judge quashes the indict ment charging Willam Wood, presi: dent of the woolen trust, with prof iteering. So far as the law and the people are concerned, William Wood and the woolen trust can go right ahead profiteering at 100 to 300 per | cent, as they have been doing for the last two years, I have been amazed that several federal judges have declared crim- inal profiteern beyond the ncope of| the Lever act, and turned them loose, The country was similarly amazed when the supreme court, by its recent five to four decision, de clared stock dividends not taxable as income. This decision of the su preme court largely nullifies the in come tax amendment to the consti tution. It #till applies to the man with w| small income that he can not well convert into a stock dividend, The man on a salary can not incor “8! porate himself and declare a stock dividend for the amount of his earn ings at the end of the year, His in come is incothe, and must pay the income tax. But it does not take five judges on the supreme bench to overturn an act of congress. One judge can do it. have done it. the lawa, we find our courts busy “making laws” and “breaking laws.’ One judge may uphold a law. An other declares it void, On this pdint Lawyer J. C, Harper writes mo from Those who walt too long to learn @ new dance are nOjrq jolla, Cal: DANGER IN OF BRANC “Time and again the court of the United States has said that every law passed by congress is presumed to be valid. Away back in the'deeisions of that court it was stated; ‘It is but a decent respect due to the wisdom, the integrity and |the patriotiam of the legislative body by which any law is passed to pre. sume in favor of its validity, until ita violation of the proved beyond a reasona doubt.’ More than half a century the same court held, ‘Every possible presump. tion is in favor of the validity of the |statute and this continues until con- | rational | trary is shown beyond a doubt. “‘One branch of the government can not encroach upon the domain of the other without danger. The safety of our constitution depends in no small degree upon the strict ob servance of this salutary rule,’ Here is another professional opin. fon I have received from Lawyer John J. Jessert of Fort Worth, Tex. He says, in part: “Laws will avail Uttle if courts are to be allowed to continue to an- nul, change, add to, subtract from, or enact new laws that have not squared with the notions of federal judges who have found their way into the various courts of thie coun. try. What law is safe if the courts are to be allowed the final say in regard to all acts of the legislative branch of the government, a prerog ative they have usurped, “Four judges have passed on the constitutionality of the Lever act. Two have found it good, and two have held it unconstitutional, there by making It impossible of enforce. ment. It has been clouded in the same way by a whisky judge at Louisville, Ky. The farm loan bank act is worthiess, its constitutionality Sen. Arthur Cap Star Toda y on What of the Courts? Scores of judges individually | Instead of enforcing | supreme | institution is | 4 9 Wt | has been clouded by a federal judge. has ever been held un & unanimous de-| eixion of the supreme court, but this purt has re-enacted lawn that have unconstitutional. would indicate that the decisions re | fleet nothing more than the personal individual No law J constitutional by |been heid opinions of the who change with membership. ‘There ix only one remedy to curb | thix tendency of our courts to defeat both of tegintation and onatitutional ainendments, take away Jurisdiction from the court in every case where one of the questions at |isxue is the constitutionality of an ot of Inginiation, or the validity of ot. In article 3 of the all reforms, ure that will An executive power, and It is Ume [t was used to the limit.” The Fuzzy Wuzzy Rug Co. Since 1900 Phone Capitol 1233 Camels are sold overy- where in scientifically scaled packages of 20 cigarettes for 20 cents; ik (200 tronily recommend this carton for the home or office supply or when you traven” of nen ~ By CONDO WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1970. SUCH IS LIVE IN A MUSIC STORE ; yourvelf. The again. Such Such eyes! ‘8 « ewell un,” the Informa you, ‘8 a quarter anywhere but here, ! Play that “Bustin? Bungs uba” rag fer thin lady? goddess ix m omiles! Such teeth! It Poisoned Socrates. Favoring Under Dog. Thus tt goest She nells “Kinsen” tor a dime; “The | Plone of Washington Square” goes on {the block for half a dollar and “My |Old Kentucky Home” iw first mort gaged for 60 conta, “Wah-cha say?" She rolls her eyes She pushes three } When you find a human emotion |that is bad you can trace its path thru the business world, as also thru the social, educational or religious world, by the waste and ruin it She rolls her languid fin gers against the Spanish comb that | cum | rises like a spar afloat upon the crest | causes, ax a tornado. jof the Permanent Wave. The other One of the stant products Of | nand presents four pink and shining jthe human animal ia Envy. inst the pate | Envy, t# ing bad because an- r belt that binds flesh georgette other succ to blue serge. | It ts th poentrated essence of} “Wahcha say?” |the cusnednens of mankind. Like all things devilish ft has many disguises, never shows It#| yuh “fh Lingerin’ Bi mre own proper ugly face, |thing. D'ja see ‘Bowery Bell? '8 a pd Sees . A g00d proportion of the reforms| good.un.” He—I'm going to build a house that claim to protest against injus-| ‘Timidly you ask for “Sonata in B|for you. toe in sheer Envy ” | She—Will it have two stories? “No'm, we ain't got that. Give! ‘There are, undoubtedly, many s#in- Boethoven, you know,” you say.| He—Yes, You tell one and I'll tell cere advocates of revolution, but the! “jate-over? Naw lady. you mean |e business has a fatal attraction for|Berlin, ‘Taint ‘B Flat,’ neither eee ® dingruntied You're thinkin’ of, ‘It's Hell to Be When the furtive, festive wood- Envy clogs the wheels of business. | Fiat in a Flat.’ We're outa that-un.” tick is aticking, Whoever rines above the commons) “Was zat? Don't know? fay, | Fully bent on finding place te the struggle of life is a target for a thousand potsoned arrows. indy, do oy know who you're wtalk jin’ to? plant his beak, Fair fastidious and fond of | To many envy-smitten minds the) “Hey, Mazie, here's a dame wot Juicy picking, |fact that a man is rich is prima) thinks she knows more about pop'lar He rambles up Miss Annabel's facie evidence that he is some sort| music than I do! Kin yuh beat that physique, lof a scoundrel. |fer noive?” —Aries, | Envy crucified Jerus and poisoned _- e228 Socrates, and there never has been| You apologize. You can't help & man since who excelled in good- | Aww ner nrnrrnrnnmnmnn—nrnnn—_| ness or wisdom that snarling hu-/that the man who can make more |man hounds have not wanted to| money, talk better, 1s more popular, bite. lean play @ better game of golf or If you are & woman, your very) jump further backwards, angers|Coat of Mail. The women are still | beauty ts an enee and your virtue | him, the same. When suing for a divorce an insult, and “be thou chaste as ice| Very few Judgments are uncolored | the woman's ‘sult consists of mail and pure as mow thou shalt not|by Envy. \nubby’s mail eneape calumny.” An Love is the greatest thing in the world, Envy ts the smallest. As Love is the zenith of the soul, Envy is ite master. John D, Rockefeller is probably | doing more with his money to pro- | mote the welfare of the race than| any living man. He probably has ax | many sins to answer for as I, but! that Is not why the average apur-| ball hates him. His outstanding sin ta his puccens | Nature designed that the ox-all soup should be a dessert and come last eee Joan of Arc went to battle with @ PP PROFIT and SAFETY Your Savings here will enjoy both. + For 19 years we have never paid less BO dividend, and all funds are protected by Strict State Supervision. NS TONS Guus Qaw) Bolsheviem in organized Enyy. It is the bureting of the dam by the ods of irritated Envy, and ta over- |flowing the nations. Shake the plain unadulterated Envy out of the hordes that hate Capitaliam and you would not have! much left | The United States is soundly loathed in many parts of the Old | World, for no reason except that we are rich and promperous and they | are not | 1 am no apologist for Great Brit- ain, and Jobn Bull has doubtless as many evif traits as his neighbors, | but the prime cause of the foam | that gathers upon the lips of certain | |S men at the mention of his name is/ the fact that he has, up to date, | done about the best Job of govern- = ~ a= —— This judges changes of ~~ 6 > meas appellate Resources over Four Million Dollars Puget Sound Savings @ Loan Association Where Pike Street Crosses Third One reason why we favor the under dog i# that nobody envies him. One reason why we think the poor are better than the rich, eurer ta be kind and to get to heaven, ts that| Bf —EE — nobody wants to be poor and every-| Of PSone Rem 5 on a oe 5 om > a> man OO That which makes a Bad Sport ts = ee Se? = Make yours You’ve got a revelation in quality 4 and satisfaction awaiting you today! Be Camels! OU’LL swing into the Camel pro- cession as easily and as delightedly as any of the thousands of smokers who have found these cigarettes a revelation in quality, in refreshing flavor, and in mellow mild body! Camels are an expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos. You will prefer Camels blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight! And, Camels will not tire your taste! Smoke them liberally—always with keen relish! And, Camels leave no unpleas- ant cigaretty aftertaste nor unpleasant cigaretty odor. Compare Camels with any cigarette in the world at any price! R, J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, Winston-Salem, N.C.