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_BATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 19%. @BEPORT ON | TRAFFIC IN NARCOTICS Church Federation to Ask| Maximum Sentences From Federal Judges in Seattle | — | Appointment of a committee to upon federal judges and urge Maximum sentences for all traffick lers im narcotic drugs, has been Unanimously agreed upon by t | attle Federation of Churches, ra Ang to a report made today by H. I Chatterton, executive secretary The federation, he reports, has Wnanimousiy endorsed the proposed Amendment to the Harrison drum Act, Intended to prohibit exportation @f opium or any of its derivatives from the United States and limiting the importation to that amount Meeded for medical purposes federation at a recent meeting @ the report of Rev. U. G. Mur Phy and J. R. Justice, a committee, Appointed by the federations depart- Ment of civic betterment to probe | the dope traffic. | They reported that opium pro @uced in India by British govern Ment monopoly ts manufactured into | @erivatives and shipped to the United States in great quantity, It ds then shipped to Japan, thence Back to the United States and sold thru drug peddlers, or sent to China. | INCREASE ALARMS DOPE COMMITTEE “There has been an alarming tn: | | €rease recently of drug addicts in | the United States,” the committee re. Ported. “It is estimated that there | Bre §,000 in Seattle alone. The fact that the United States ts a partner fm the production of this death-deal fing drug that is producing hundreds ef thousands of hopeless victims in ‘ur own country is humiliating and alarming.” Another committee of the federa. tion, Rev. W. R. Sawhill and J. R F Justice, recommended the licensing by the city, the license to! b Okable by the city council for . The recommendation wus unanimously, RESISTS BANDIT; GROCER IS KILLED Portland Man Shot; Robber Escapes PORTLAND, Aug. %1—Shot he resisted a man who at- to rob him, John 4&1 psn in an outlying ct, lived only long enough to neighbors who responded to/ his cries that he had been woundet By & would-be robber who escaped | wm an automobile. | “But he didn’t get anything,” | @Aded Thompson, and died. ‘Thompson wis sweeping the side- ‘walk in front of bis store last nich> when “a small man” attempted “to hold up the grocery establisi-| ment. The grocer started to fight) \the bandit, and was shot under ‘the heart. pung Hebrews to Stage Dance Party A moonlight dancing party, the ‘first of the 1920 season, will be given under the auspices @f the American . M. HA. on Thursday, August 26. The party will proceed to| Fletcher's bay on the good ship Argo, | Teaving the foot of Pike st. at 7:30| sharp. ! Coolidge Coming Here in September | SPOKA Aug. 21.—Gov. Calvin Coolidge, republican nominee for the | ‘vice presidency, will speak in Spo | Kane shortly after the primary elec 14, according to Fortes, Harding cam manager, in an announcement terday, Senator Beveridge of In Senator Johnson of California, Senator Freylinghusen of Now| will make a seriés of speeches this region, he announced, |Broke Jail; Pleads Guilty to Murder) PENDLETON, Ore., Aug. 21—~Nell e of first degree murder in cir- | feult court here yesterday. MINNEAPOLIS.—Three hundred registered as legally for the first time, the ceremonies were med 36 years ago. The unr Mered certificates were hidden in a minister's desk. (Hen Cackled and Egg “Leaked” Out SPOKANE.—The appearance of Hhthe officers #0 terrified the hen that he “ege”’ she left proved to be & bottle of cognac and Mrs. consequence. iP (Continued from yesterday) 1920 lear} here, anyway Prather says Mary; mother, Marie, and every one else says Mary Marie, A di- vorce in the family by ribly excited” @ book—« low | mast call It @ diary, because and she must live with father half of cach year, ree Sarah tolls Mary Marte all about thinks of nothing he le very young, y after the first | father kind of tinkles like little stiver betta. he never brings bor. He never takes her anywhere heard Aunt Hattie tell mother so at the very first, when he came they weren't a bit r, and that there'd probably be |a divorcee before long. | |asked for her just the same the very [next time And Mary Marie “ter and she decides to write story—about it, enty she But mother did forget everything for her, chides her for distracting father from his work, for he ts to be president of the college—ihey hope Mother, tempt to make father popular with the students, entertains @ lot, but father Mother stays at home, and then Mary Marie hears a new word —"diveree”"—and mother takes hee out | #60, they were is granted, and | selven—mother and this Mr, Farlow. | Then something happened and they e's done it ever 1 think I know now why she does scolds hee for it, thelr things and ver new. In Boston Mary Marie is Marie, amd she begins to find life very gay an Mother gore about and hae | mes and Mary Marie starts to | school. She is very busy trying to decide | this, the men mother gore out with will be her lover—because ate must : that in the story, and besides she focis | '4 one day, that some care should be taken in entect ing another father for her after the carciewsoess shown in the sealer | father came. nor Aunt Hattie. heard them talking at NERKE TODAY Well, anyhow, he’s the father I've |srown up with, and of course I'm used to him now gether different matter to think of having @ brand-new father all ready-made, and of course I am inter sated. There's such a whole lot de mother was just to be polite to company could see that And the very first chance she got she turned and began }to talk to a Indy who was stand ahe never # looked toward Mr, Harlow again. The ladies in front of me laughed and one of them said, with a of her head, different things ‘ would | have been at home if my father had There were such a lot of things I had to be careful not —and just as many I had to to do—on account H been different! And s0 now, when I see all these young gentlemen aren't all young; some of them are quite old) coming to the house and talking to mother, and, hanging over | the back of her chair, and handing|taxe care of herself, too, her tea and little cakes, I can’t help! wondering which, if any, is going to| p lover and my new father, | And I am also wondering what I'll| have to do on account of him when I get him, if I get him. re are quite @ lot of them, and| they're all different. They’a make| very different kinds of fathers, I'm | sare, and I'm afraid I wouldn't like| some of them. mother that ought to settle which to She's the one to be pleased, “Twould be such a pity to have to change again. Though she} of course, same as sbe did/ father, I suppose. they're all different. There are only two that are any- where near alike, and they aren't quite the same, for one’s a lawyer and the other's tn a bank. both carry canes and wear tall silk hats, and part thelr hair In the mid- dle, and look at you through the kind of big round eyegiasses with dark rims that would make you awfully homely if they didn’t make | Dc*. But 1 don't {oUt much by bir think mother cares very much for ,/oking. though he's quite old either the lawyer or the bank man,!*!most 20. He told ma. I asked him. | and I'm glad. I wouldn't like to live with those glasses every day, even ig) School every day, so I see quite a) they are stylish. have father's kind. | Then there's the man that paints), pictures. He's tall wears queer ties and long hair. always standing back and looking at things with his head on one side and exclaiming, “Ob!" and “Ah!” with a long breath. He says mother’s color- ing is wonderful. I didn't like Why, it sounded as if she put it on herself out of a box on her bureau, same as some other ladies do! he's not so bad, maybe; though I'm sure but what his paints and pictures would be just as tiresome) to live with as father’s stars, when |! |it came right down to wanting al, husband to lve with you and talk} to you every day tn the year. know you have things when It comes to choosing a new father—I mean a new husband. | (1 keep forgetting that {t's mother and not me that's doing the choos- @f card rocms, soft drink places and fice | them to see me. was proud of it. '@ have sald #0. If they had turned there's no danger, even if he and mother were lovers once. He's got a wife now, and even! if he got @ divores, I don't believe | ter* protesting against mother would choose him But of courne, there's no telling | which one she wil! take. | before, I don't know. I euspect it isn’t any more proper to hurry ap about! getting married again when you" been unmarried by a divorce than ft fs when you've been unmarried by | your husband's dying. I aaked Peter jone day how soon folks did get mar- ried after a divores, but he didn't Anyway, all he said “Er—yea, Mine— But, after all, As T said) It's too soon, | seem to know was to #tammer Peter ts awfully funny. But he's ike him, onty I can't find look so. stylish. He's very 60 to} lot of him. And, realty, Va much rather and slim, and I heard him. Try our carefully pre- pared sandwiches with a cup of— Well, to resume and go on. There I mustn't forget But, then, nobody could for- #0 handsome distinguished-looking with his dark eyes and And he plays—well, And you'll know how good lunch can be. United Tea & Coffee Stores Liberty Market 119 Yesler Way South End Masket - the violinist. He's lovely; & Hart, who fatally shot Sheriff Til| perfectly beautiful or during the recent Pendleton | white jail delivery, pleaded guilty to a|I'm simply crazy over his playing. I Carrie Heywood could She thinks her brother He's @ traveling violinist Minister Forgot |with a show; and he came home once to Andersonville, Only 300 Weddings | him. But he’s not the real thing at | Why, he might be anybody, our grocer, or the butcher, | AMUSEMENTS MOORE onrann™ atin “The Love Sh mpion,” Mi: And I heard j all, ‘e little and blue, and his hair | nd very short could hear our violinist play! comes to the parties and teas;—oh, them, married men with wives, and men with and without mean another man | He's @ he fied from the nest cackling. | ; beard and big soft He's really awfully g00d look I don't know what but he's married. I know th x VL) Worth is in jail on a liquor charge | Did It So Ladylike, Judge Frees Her Altho Mrs. Breslin the stand that sho! collins an “old an,” phe it in “a most ladylike manner” the judge let her off. Engravers Elect Man From Seattle | les Horrocks of Seattle was n third vice president of the | tional Photo - Engravers’ | Wnion of North America at a meet “Ang of representatives of that organ. | zation in Pittsburgh yesterday, You Get Started dancing sooner by my easy method than ¥—begin my easy course to- day any time between 10 a, m, and 10 and you will be able to have the next dance ive for my pupils in the new K. of P. Third and Virginia r learning all the popular dances in private lessons, you nd plenty of desirable partners to satisfaction. Here is where, variations of | eording to information received here | today. Studio, 1004 4th, cor Very Low Raten THE SEATTLE STAR Mary Marie y EleanorHPorter COPYFPRIGHT down to the kit why not to do things. up of “don'ts.” If th by |maybe we wouldn't funny, but I guess | what I mean.) mother to have lovers I can't ask of will want to get were made on earth. togethe month, and it's growing nicer all the| just have Jo forget. She doesn't| used to sometimes after they'd beem have any time to remember. I think | having one of their incompatibility” B she ts forgetting, too. Oh, of course she getatired, and sometimes rainy | era in the rooms, and the little fern| days or twilights I find her on the | Very often, dish on the dining room table, the | sofa in her room not reading or any-| 80 I really think #he is forgetting, | thing, and her face looks ‘mont as it! (Continued Monday). i one or two letters from women. And I just love it here wunshine everywhere, tains up to let it in. and the eur. And the flow prove how much more lacking in & of things women And he was just going to say more whem Aunt Hat- Ue brintied up and tonne and sald, real indignantly “A sense of fitness of things, In- Oh, yeu, that’s all very well ready to be picke and smiling all house, and lovely ladies and gentle- | drawing room and tea and little I come home from school in the af- it not to have! Baby Lester p bt, who are shocked beyon the idea of hanging @ anything at to look up and we fear father’s coming in and TN making a noise. think nothing of going straight home y minerable that ging would lueky escape from something worre,” “Harriet!” exclaimed grandpa in a shocked volea, 1 mean tt!" declared Hattie emphatically. Madge here, and that wretch of 4 husband of hers!” And just here is where the funny Mother bristled up and even more than Aunt) Hattie had, She turned red and then white, and her eyes biased. Hattie, please, she sald, very cold, “Dr, Anderson Me is an honorable, Without doubt And best of all, love mother with her dancing eyes and her laugh, happy, with no going in and finding her trying or looking long ana fixed ly at nothing, and then turning to woman #o absolt i never brings his wife, though; but} the only one I can ask questions of mother’s always asking for he and distinct, and sho always smiles,|like Nurse Sarah used to be, | the cook, talks so funny I can't un jderctand a word she says, hardly Reatdes, the only two times I've been hen Aunt Hattle| | sent for me; and she told me the last time pot to go any more. say why. Aunt Hattie never says She just says, | “Don't” Sometimes it seems to me as if my whole life had be ‘a only tell wu: rt of the time things and her just There ten't anybody “Look at poor makes you! want to go and ery because It's #0 hurt and heart-broken. thing happened Somebody is doing some thing for her every moment are no glad |my presence,” talking one day, wretch at all scholarly gentleman. » meant to be kind and consider- He simply did not understand ied her “Poor Madge” time todo the “don't.” (That sounds a wretched that they, for one, should try to do everything they could to make her Well, what was I saying? And she got up and swept out of know—about asking questions, said, there isn't anybody like Nurse Sarah here, I can't Of course, mother didn’t tell me| Olga, and Theresa, the other maid, It was two/in just about as bad, Aunt Mattie's lovely, but I can't ask questions of her, She inn’t the kind. Besides, Les- them, and I couldn't get away, so I/ter'n always there, | Just couldn't help hearing what they | can't discuss children, Of course there's mother ‘They were looking across the room /and Grandpa Desmond. Mr. Harlow was talking/tions like when it's He was leaning forward in| | bis chair and talking #0 earnestly to| them, of course. 86 there's no one mother; and he looked just as if he|but Peter left to ask thought there wasn't another soul in| right and very nice, But ,seem to know anything that 1 we to know. So he doesn't amount to Anybody | so very much, after all. | I'm not sure, anyway, that mother | married again. Hing | From little things she says I rather &8) gueen she doe And that’s what they all seem to to make her forget There isn't a day goes by but that somebody sends flowers or books or candy, or invites her somewhere, takes her to ride or to the th or comes to ee her, #0 that mother is in just one whirl of good times from morning till night. Why, she'd | =LOEW’s— Now wasn’t Juat loved it, all the same. Jlove mother when she's superb and |haughty and disdainful she had gone Aunt ? that funny? be trying to do- mily affairs jrandpa shrugged his shoulders, and gave his hands a funny little flour- ish; and Aunt Hattie lifted her eye- what do you (Aunt Hattie forgot I was in room, 1 know, or she'd never in the world have used slang like that!) And after all the things she’s naid about how unhappy she was!” fin- 1 Aunt Hattie Grandpa didn't say anything, but know about but he doesn't THEATRE Continuous Daicy | t°l! Direction of Ackerman & Harris TONIGHT, LAST TIMES AL GOLEM TROUPE TOMORROW, MONDAY, TU: DAY AND WEDNESDAY New All-Star Vaudeville Show FIVE AVALLONS Speedy and Difficult Feats on the Double Wire GPORGE 8. FREDERICK & CO. In a Spretacular Comedy “The Conductor” EARL & EDWARDS “Nutty Nonsense” ~~ CLIFTON & KRAMER t think much of| And ft wan kind of queer, when| | marriage, anyway. One day I heard |her say to Aunt Hattie that it was 4 very pretty theory that marriages were made in heaven, | Madge Desmond Anderson can 100K | real facts of the case were that they out for herself all right.” Then they got up and went awny| day I heard her say that one t without seeing me. And all of a sud den I felt almost sorry, for I wagted|and wife I wanted them to see that I knew my mother could || mother, I mean, waan't it? One month tater. Well, I've been here another whole FREE DOCTOR Ex-Government Physician All accute and chronic diseases treated by latest methods’ We of- fer this service to any patron of our stores, Also @ free eye, ear, nome and throat ¢linic glasses bere and be satisfied. THE OLD RELIABLE RIGHT DRUG CO. 1111 First Ave. but that the And another with marriage was that the husband t know how to play and to reat together. lots of times I've heard her say little and that 1) things to Aunt Hattie that showed how unhappy her marriage had been. | But last night @ funny thing hap pened. We were all in the library I shouldn't ike Mr. Harlow for a|feading after dinner, and grandpa looked up from his paper and said omething about a woman that was sentenced to be hanged & whole lot of men were writing let- 169 Washingt: St, Near Second Look for the Decter sign | woman hanged; but there were only! and BK K. LINCOLN in “THE UNKNOWN LOVE” Performance Admissions: Afternoons, 20c; Chil and Holidays, 30¢; Children, 20 You remember those enormously popular “Back to God’s Country” and “The River’s End’’? pictures, The same master hand that wrote them— JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD Wrote the big Northland tale being seen here today. OSCAR GERARD And Two of the Beauties from the Chorus YOU'LL GIGGLE—YOU'LL LAU YOU’LL SCREAM—YOU’LL ROAR AT OSCAR GERARD and ROBERT LORENZO IN— NIGHT” GOOD, CLEAN, WHOLESOME COM THAT WILL OFFEND NO ONE—AND YET WILL DELIGHT ALL BEYOND A DOUBT— THE OFFERING THAT HAS STAGE—A THIS WEEK K GRACED OUR LARGE FAST WHIRL MUSIC AND PRETTY SPLASH OF GORGEOU ELABORATE WARDROBE WORN BY THE LARGE, SUN-KISS CHORUS OF BEAUTIES Sunday and Evenings: 40c “God’s Country and the Woman’’ The cast includes Nell Shipman, the beautiful heroine of “Back to God’s Country,” and William Duncan. HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY—“AN EASTERN WESTERNER” 1 4, WITH A VIVID times, But 1 don’t find her that-wayy and it doesn’t last JOHN DANZ Moe 4” AT. PIKE WHAT IS IT THAT COMES STARTING ONCE TO EVERY MAN? TODAY If you like a fight—the fight of a young man to” make good—the physical fight of the prize ring— then you will like— “ONCE TO EVERY MAN” WITH JACK SHERRILL and MABEL’ WITHEE FIRST TIME SHOWN IN SEATTLE Concert Orchestra Numbers Selection, “Mikado” ......... seveeees-Gilbert and Sull “I’m in Heaven When I’m in My Mother's Arms”,....Milton Ager, . CONCERT ORCHESTRA MP VAr HUBER ~ CONDUC EVERY MAN AN ARTIS A spectacular produc- tion laid in the timbered country north of 53— Lamy te iri mah r