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. Annee Ey Weather Tonight , and Wednesday, fair; moderate west- Maximum, 73. Minimum, 56, erly winds ‘Temperature Last 24 Hours: Today Noon, 62 = AS IT SEEMS TO ME DANA SLEETH HE thinking world, that is such portion of the pop ulation as bothers {teelf with psychology, theol ogy and humanitarian fam, is divided into two broad Bchools of thought. One of these holds that beneath the skin all Men are beasts; th ner, that at heart all men are divi There are two camps wherein May be found about the religious Warriors of all time; one army con tending that man was born in iniquity, and in his heart is dew Perately wicked; the other, that Man was created in God's image, nd that he never can depart for Any great space of time from his divine heritage. All lesser religious lines are Merely corps and regimental di Visions; all theology will be found to group itself under one of these banners, and »} matter how di- A 4 Verse may appear the various bY Broups that form one army, still, at heart, they are ona, eee ND yet, looking out over my world, I can see no evidence to support b> either contention I find that some men Bre desperately wicked, and that others are wonderfully kind, seif- effacing, modest and decent. T find that occasionally the race Produces a woman like the Port- Jand mother who took great de light in torturing little chikiren, Dut that the great majority of | Women are virtuous. sober, Motherly, self-sacrificing and de- ‘Voted to the larger good. i For every specimen of original sin I can produce a dozen men who could qualify for anybody's heav- en, even tho they may not be sure there is a heaven at all. I find the business world is built on credit, on faith in your fellow’s honesty, on integrity, but also [ find provision made for the occa- sional crook and weakling, who could hardly intrude in a perfect world. Once more one must conclude that theology, like science, is prone 4® reason from the part, to be eoree dogmatic, to set up its rule Z and to ignore all that, will not be ‘ Measured by it cee SURMISE that man ts neither essentially and determinately vicious, nor is he godlike. I assume that most of Us start even, with perhaps a bit of a hangover from heredity, and the sins of our parents. But we start near enough even for the i Fough purposes of justice, and we “9 Work out our own fate thru the _' years, b Most men are better men at 40 than @ey were at 20. Age not only brings wisdom thru sad expert ence; it cools the animal spirits of Youth, and makes right living and calm thinking easier, § Indeed much of our good citizen: ship, our placid, ordered, routine @ubjection to circumstances, is merely admission of individual de- feat; an admission of an inbality j to stem the tide and achieve great ness. eee UT thru the natural world one finds more of the “ benign than he does of the malign. Nature is not cursed, nor is the natural man cursed in 1 his reiation with natur Work, K eweat, toll, arduous effort without E @easing, these are good; only a Jazy man ever taught the doctrine of work being a curse. It is the one great blessing and need of the race. 4 Fire cheers more than it con- “ sumes. Cold invigorates more than it kills. Storms refresh the earth more | than they de ate. There are a hundred loving fathers to every sneak thief; a thousand good citizens for every murderer ten thousand an gelic mothers for every “fallen” woman. The animal ki m is not by mature mean or vicious or de structive. Only the cornered f mother guarding her young, the ¥ male protecting his mate, the cor i , Hered, wounded animal, only these attack man The deadly snake will escape, if ft may; the cougar and the lion and the bear only ask that they be left in peace There ix, in short, no indication fn the natural world that deprav. ity or hate ix the directed order o¢ Nor is there indication that un restrained gent love, peace, F werenity are amental laws . of the anima} kingdom j If one une that part of him that ad Lmeems the nearest eternal, and therefore the nearest divine, his Teason; ond from the estab. lished fact all Wife thru the ages, one munt agree t neither innate depravity nor inescapable godhood are true theories. Of course if one use neither his Resigns as Director of aa MATION erans’ Welfare Commis- | Veterans’ Welfare commission, has! |tendered hin resignation, following | the demands of ex#ervice men that | Vine husband's # |for United States senator against | power. Wesley L. Jones, who ts seeking re | Mrs. Harding t* « perponality. A; | nomination ‘The resignation is to) womanly perronality, | take effect next Monday. | mental vigor Inglis’ name had been mentioned| we are so fond of believing are the for the toga for the past year, since | peculiar wifte }he returned from active service In ALERT, PO! | France | WELL-STOC Inglis was the only national guard) 1 do not | officer who gained a command over | Mr He was in the hotel business when | would have declare, that various insurance ad- juatments, neglected by the authort: ties In Washington, were secured. FOR 30 YEARS of woman. | tes tn the "90's. He was active in the |mational guard since 189%, winning | hia promotion steady application. | | For many years he was also ident door seeing | commanding of | regiment, where it became part of/own porch. |the ist division, When this divis-|with me on combat service and was assigned to jea the 109th infantry of the 28th divis- | nang }ion. He led these men into the Ar- |gonne battle September 26, 1918. Later he was in charge of the 20th infantry and Fourth infantry of the | Third division of regular troops. In-| | glia was gassed during one engage ment. simply | Olympics Trip Henrietta. McKaughan, for whom| |forest rangers and expert woodamen searched in the wilds of the Olym-| pie mountains in Washington Sun day and Monday, is safe, acpord-| iy ie vue, ing to a message which was re-| | dritied into ceived here today by the Portland | {The | Journal, by whom Miss McKaughan |* 1 [strength to lis employed as a reporter. | Searchers were sent out for the| young woman Sunday when she/ days behind schedule | was Bey on her walking trip across the) Olympic range The message to the Journal said the reporter reached a trail build-|V’d rather amp Monday but didn’t give cellar, if 1 er’s the loc was * She reached Quinault lake | | night. boys” by | on New York List!2. "in jthe Star shortly after the ket today |nearly $5 a | opening of ther quite literal, \his senses, and of all human ex- | ing orders plane and any thi erly adopted and believed But for myself, I stick with my esteemed peer, Patrick Henr having but one light to guide my | today |footsteps, the light of experience; | men—thank 1 experience ag recorded by men those On the I: 1899, at the Postoffies at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of ¢ ue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Sta Entered as Second Clase Matter May 3, snares March 3, 1879 Per Yeur, by Mall, #5 to $9 ‘PLOT TO SMUGGLE = BROKEN UP HERE; EIGHT anes SEATTLE, WASH., SSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1920. REDS SWEEP NEARER COL INGLIS Zoe Beckley Visits Mrs. Harding T0 RUN FOR Wife | Knew Warren Was ‘Comer |\“Running Mate” publican | "edeed Hiecte Sevens’ BY ZOE Candidate— | j Warren G. Harding & tient then] * ; | will be two p sion to Campaign |itles in the Wh | Harding in no mere gentle shadow Col, William Inglis, director of the | | flitting in the background of her No echo. jhe actively enter the republican race | silent worshiper self-effacing executive ability Harding ls what our revered! | regular troops during the recent war.| Now England greatgrandfathers he left. When he came back he W854) creetur’.” Or that she arrogat tendered the post with the welfare | herself any of life commission. There hin activities were | are more fittingly in the province constantly directed in behalf of the! o¢ ner Meee lord. exeervice men, and it was thru his But M " Personal influence, many of the men! os ov oe he on ane Which makes her complimentary “running mate” for jtrant ¢ HAS LIVED IN SEATTLE a posi wf ~ decisions which a different type Somehow Mrs. Inglis is 45, and has lived In Seat-| ings photographs had not impressed |tle for more than 20 years. Heime with the | worked his Way as & newsboy thru (namic qualities I sensed the instant grammar and high school. He #l#0 |} caught sight of her in the grounds worked his way thru college at the of her Marion home University of Washington, where he| One minute she was out Was prominently identified in athlet- | sidewalk directing some colorfutness who were shoveling gravel The next she was at the kitchen | fled with the Seattle Athictic club. | “@eauately supplied terials of her art | In private life he has been engaged | ‘*T!!* in operating business properties ACCUSTOMED TO MEETING When the war broke out he was| ANY SORT OF DEMAND er of the Second! In a jiffy she had whizzed across | Washington, later designated as the the lawn to | 16lst Infantry. It was Colonel Inglis| which serves as campaign who took overseas Washington's own | Again she had whipped back to Ter| Harding sat down the porch and jalked jton was broken up, Inglie asked for! with the ease of a person accustom the house next door to meeting fier the Marow rivers. | BOLSHEVIKI STRIKE ae RICH OIL ZONE “T've always Dutehinan, married to a6 aristocrat of New England. business and and my mother specialized schooled me Preparatory to the Metz amash, &™!0*s of life. Colonel Ingli# was assigned the duty | Wa" kept bu of reorganizing the Fourth infantry.|!t- I may wear out, They were on the way to the Metz| never rust out sector when the armistice was| “I have re signed. They took the advance guard| your father disapproved to the right column of the Army of | marriage to Mr. Occupation. “How I wish he ————— said Mrs. Harding. | fully my belief in Warren hi Girl Reporter «0s: "w: | went on, “counted success Is Safe After |: *"%ers Empire Building Losing Its counterweight when the became entangled and Rickenbacher, were alive now.” , the middie elevator in the Em ond floor to the basement just before see, my father 1 planes owned by John | Lenine and tles to be pushed continuously until lAugust 4, in spite of the proposed ettaped the York to San Francisco. » other two planes made a safe | * third failed to gain | the ling would put Poland completely at | the me shipped back | » of the occupants was | - WRECKS TRUCK; | LOSES LIQUOR Baseball Game | Poor Driving Causes Grief crowd of 10,000 } people, qualities. In other words, ad Wee taetet armi |man, not a woman, Coulter, mana building, Mew let out a pas eW WARREN AN EXCEPTIONAL M. PORTLAND, Ore, Aug. 3.—Miss! wpe 1 paw those qualiti wrecked and ‘knew 35 years Harding was an exceptional |He first attracted me by the way he talked. He was interesting. And heavy counterweight parted from its and crashed to the . followed by the elevator. Cross ordered all its considered a miracle, determination, own judgment despite objections I do not like to cook” «he laughs hate fussing with lelean out the C. of C. Will See mals, for Balich PORTLAND, » driving on the part of Martin decorate and |noon for the steak and boil potatoes!” tion of the camp. Nothing| Mrs. Harding ed as to her condition,| With human material st |half a dozen men today and elsewhere whom cause ruination of his 4 charge of viola prohibition law was following head of the crowd made > n unde her capable ha |Cotton Breaks $5 | days whet ahe Wan telpiag Bie hee a street ear NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—Cotton broke| The phrase Chamber of Com truck and demolishing a for their st sterior Portion | employes ears, and even the jof their haberdashery | reason, nor believe the evidence of | used as conta nd inducing speed. perience, then he is on another |enaR OFFICE STARTED y can be prop | THEM TOWARD SUCCESS ported finding 2 ox-Rooseveltites Postpone Meeting NEWLY-WEDS LIVE “I certainly WITH HOMEFOLKS in |round,” laughs SAG Ais ieate ned indefinitely t | jority of young persons marr that the Star office awoke them verywhere from the dawn of his- |their_ own ponsibilitie wry. (Turn to Page 2, Columa 5) who was to have been the principal speaker, shortage is re¥ponsible, Two ARMIES OF POLAND ARE ROUTED Bolsheviki Break Off Truce Negotiations and Continue Ruthless Advance LONDON, Aug. 3.—The Bol- sheviki occupied Brest Litovak on Sunday, taking prisoners and war booty, according to official Moscow wireless messages and diplomatic advices received here this afternoon, ‘The dinpatches further declared that armistice negotiations be tween the Poles and the Bolshe- viki have been broken off and that the reds are only 46 miles from Warsaw, following the “dis- astrous defeat” of the Polish Grst and fourth armies. Brest Litovsk is an tmportant| fortrems about 120 miles from War- aa MERCILESS PEACE 18 SOVIETS PLAN Bolsbeviki thru the Moscow ent out word that the arm- beep abruptly Remotlekens tad ended because the Polish delegates were muthorized only to parley for a temporary ceanation of hostilities. They were told to return to War-| | maw and get power to agree on peace ‘terms. The next meeting, the wire less said, would be Thursday at | Minsk It is the evident Intention of the/| | Bolshevik to impose a merciless peace on the field of battle. Officials | here were tnelined to doubt that the lw arsaw government would give the | delegates authority to return and ne. | otiate for peace under such condi | tions | Two POLISH ARMIES | IN FULL RETREAT With this development came news| point in Neva |that the First and Fourth Polish ar |mies, defending Wargaw, had been| Cheyenne; August 28, Omaha; Aug-|simply a ruse to give them an ust 29, Des Moines, and August 31, | portunity Indianapolis, |dixastrously defeated and were. in | WARREN G@. HARDING (GIRL UNHURT IN RICKENBACKER ELEVATOR DROP ESCAPES DEATH .j| Escapes Shower of Glass in ‘Rides in Airplane Whic Crashes Into House | full retreat, with the main Russian jarmy 48 miles from the Polish capl- | PELE ee Foreign office advices said the | Polish counter offensive near Brody had collapsed, and .that there was | fighting between the Bug and|ter was filed Tuesday by Prosecutor | Fred G. Brown against Phillip Hatha- way, |troiman, who shot and killed Si |Tabit, longshoreman, following a gun diel on the night of July 2 in} Longshoremen’s hall over the theft of gasoline. Hathaway discovered | jsome men stealing gasoline from an automobile near West | University st. and puns | the hall an innocent bystander and was struck by a wild shot A deep gap has been driven in the ay, front in Galicia, Red cavalry H | reaching a point only 30 miles from |Lemberg. The Reds were striking |tewards the rich Gailcian oil fields, |dispatches said at masses of Russian cavalry observed advancing in the frag region of Brody, 58 miles northeast lot Lemberg. The Poles made a stand north of Busk, but were driven back, Moscow wireless stated The Polish government announced had received information that rotzky ordered hostili- ice. The Bolshevik leaders Ivised a few more days fight- of the red army A dispatch from Berlin,» dated 7 m. Monday, announced the Red ‘omen workers » flee from Poland. Will Try to open Animal Acts Out! Mrs. the by Mra. Jennie npan ichols, field worker in the manasa | alain bureau of the Northwest, is/ ning to Centralia today to attend the legislative counell, and put be fore the voters a bill to prevent wild | trained animal acts, steer roping 40) broncho busting and other forms of | * animal | state. NOW WE CAN FLY TO LAKE CRESCENT IN A JIFFY OR TWO A trip to Lake Crescent in an hour Or thereabouts. With the inauguration of pas: service by the Western plane Co, Seattle folks will able to reach the summer re sort country in a jiffy! Tuesday aftern nthe first trip was taken by Manager James C. Sullivan, Pilot Hill and Mechani clan Hubert, It takes eight to ten hours to make the trip by auto. weeks’ }coma; August 21, | Lake Cit life | Woods was at liberty sompletion of the inquest into the death of Samuel T. A. anford 1D. Ricaby, founder | aire jeweler. k London club, which is/ for the Prevention of cruelty to anh gine ing commission, was allowed by the |council budget committee Tuesday | morning. jav protested te propriations, WHAT! DO AMERICAN MEN GO TO EUROPE TO CAPTURE WIVES WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—Amer- jea, only nation in which men outnumber women, now is sup: plying husbands for women of Europe, where there are not enough males to go around, re ports to the immigration bureau indicated today. Approximately 434,000 persons, mostly men, sailed from the United States in the year ended with June, according to reports to Commissioner General Cami- netti of the immigration bureau. “Large numbers of the men left to get married,” said Cami nets Furthermore, single European women and women widowed py the war, are rushing to the United States in the hope of se curing husbands, reports indi- cate. “A majority of the immigrants to the United States are wo- men,” Caminetti said, ROOSEVELT TO SPEAK IN WEST Three Weeks’ Tour Is Now| Outlined NEW YORK, Aug. 3--The three bureau. | dential candidate's tour. and Ogden; August 27, Detective ( Charged With Manslaughter | Information charging manslaugh- West and Surry merchant pa- rm ave. and ed them into Tabit is said to have been | MASH IN JAW | PLEASES “ART”| REMONT, Neb., Aug. 3.—Arthur | ficers, Thomas, employe, grasped «© short circuited | any plug and couldn't let go. Clyde New-|local or otherwise, who kept a regis ton, another employe, saved Thomas’ | ter of how the Japanese applying for — when he knocked him several | membership feet from the plug with a well-direct- | States. jed smash in the jaw. The punch pleased Arthur. Girl Is Released in Loftis Probe CHICAGO, Aug. 3.—Miss Ruth today pending Loftis, million- Moscow, Idaho, Is Given Census Boost WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.—The census bureau today announced the | following 1920 population result Moseow, Idaho, 3,9: | of 386 pe an_ Increase | sons, or 7.8 per cent. since 1910; Sherman Deer cruelty from entering the! county, Oregon, 416, or 9.8 per cent. | Increases since 1910; , California, 1,787, Sutter coun- 8; ' $15, 000. for New Zoning System An appropriation of $15,480 for en- ring expenses of the new zon The sum allowed includes salaries for a district engineer, four draughts men and three computors. $5,000 was allowed the zoning com: mission for the office and a se A sum of ontal of,a downtown tary, Councilman R. H, Thomson, with w towards a reduction of taxes, no avail against the ap- to Seattledhis morning and | the Jap inquiry here. bers of the committee have | to their homes or to western campaign tour of | Franklin D. Roosevelt, democratic | Mominee for vice-president, was defi- nitely outlined here today by Sena- ‘tor Pat Harrison, Mississippi, jin charge of the speaxers’ Chairman White and tend to call on Governor Cox with- | Vessel. |in the next few days at Dayton and} complete arrangements for the presi- | shore is not known, but several | tempts were made to reach @ Roosevelt will speak August 11 at | ing rowboat, and at least two Ji Chicago; August 12, Milwaukee; | ese, August 13, Minneapolis; August 19, | land were whisked away in an Spokane; August 20, Seattle and Ta |that Was waiting at the Hanford Portland; August | dock. 23, San Francisco; August 24, Sacra- | mento; August hiding in the hold. Customs |looking for booze, later who is four other Japs in concealment. Others, it ts said, reached shore Harrison in- | fore the federal agents boarded tl How many succeeded in inspectors say, did make Immigration officials declare Reno and another | these Japanese are signed up August 26, Salt| members of the “crew” in Japan, consideration which to smuggle |into the country, * ‘The eight Japs Sakui Hishamatsu, Umao Kaida, Yamezo Seba, suka Miyagashima, S. Takeda, | Kiehi Kabata and Asao Toda. ~ z ie hl Congressman Johnson issued the following statement today on the baat sumption of the Jap inquiry “In reply to the denial by Kanzaki, of the Japanese-Americam — association of San Francisco, that and other associations had | assisted in the surreptitious entry | Japanese, I wish to say that no pt i |charge had been made by me or any © member of the committee. “My statement was that a system existed for the transportation of Jap — anese*into the United States surrep ; that the committee has se | cured full information of it, the route, |names of agents and assisting of- and that the committee has in custody | kuwa Otoichi, a city electric light plant|been unable to find a secretary, of associations, of the Japanese entered the “The committee has no evidence that the Japanese government itself has knowledge of or any part in the ¢ underground system,” SULLIVAN FIRST WITNESS TODAY his failure to appear the committee this morning in answer to a telephone summons, Congressman ordered @ reauiring the prem of the Union witness this afternoon, also instrutced to appear, nto the records of the congression= al committee studying the Japanese dictated today the formal response to the demand Murphy that the fl» nances and personnel in this state be The challenge to Dr. Murphy came — Sullivan, former assist » and chairman mmittee appointed American Legion to report on the question of Japanese penetration | from John J district attorn: of the national o Murphy was characterized ag t of the Japan. «” and the war records of the chief . in favor of. se exclusion were recited, " said Sullivan, promoted ‘for bravery on the 19 months in E. D. Colvin was elf ed for bravery by Gen. . Philip Tindall received the D, . and the croix de guerre; \ (lurn to Page 15, Column 6) aid propogandi Maj, Bert C.