The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 25, 1921, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE STAR TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 19 ee ; 1 lYoUKNOW— | --— Letters to the! :, se The Justice and Delays! AS OTHERS SEE THE WORLD |e, )0n8 | eee \é HE court is not going to get hysterical. I'm just as a Widerials and Comments Reprinted From Various Newspapers anxious as any citizen that trials should be speeded, » WOMEN * , P ENFOROING THE VOLSTEAD LAW reg Seattle but courts are after justice, not revenge. I'm not going to) ‘ (rial the tow Seek Werke) (9 do anything that appears to be railroading anybody, or The “notorious and open violation” of the Volstead law, “the flagrant| Wditor The Btar: | Why is it that fi hurrying him to the gallows. acts of corruption committed in eonnection therewith” and “the scan-|With all the agitation about marri Y N f i A women working. you do not Judge Ronald, presiding judge of the superior court here, j dalous contempt for law engendered thereby” all grow out of the ele re aid bony lis thus quoted mentary fact that tho Volatend Inw is not supported by public opinion in|mention the marrind mullite yi a |thia state. On the contrary, it was enacted in defiance of public fon, |With thelr husbands—teaching in th Fran. ot of The Star heartily agre with the judge. It does not} | It belongs to the eat of legislative tyrannies vividly deser bi high school tt i a pe ack thin as a ta er of this Months $1.60) ¢ year t ; , | $5.00, tn neton.|/ take much courage at this time for me to demand the @ | Elihu Root in 1916 in a speech before the Harvard Law School Assoelm | fate rere Spee, cre te per | | blood of Schmitt, the murderer. He is a condemned man. | ton: EET POI EES Year, By carrier, city, 13¢ per wee® |) There is no escape for him, and it is pandering to mere} f Pia Ute arty b 3 law is to be found tn its development from the Jthe ‘board of education that. the paper. Rnterprice | Amoctattes | theatrical tastes and sensationalism to brush aside orderly) I | te ortain only in the fniod of & Jawa! ; ays ton } 4 {cannot employ married women, but Published Daily ty Tue ser Peswee- || Procedure, y 4 it» imponition is the mandate of a : | the superinvende a and petoctpale LOTS OF ing Co. Phone Mai | The Star has no sympathy for Schmitt—not the least. All the grave abuses which Gov. Miller recites are due to the tyran lla wey Ae MB gen THEM! It is, for once, shaken in its honest osition to capital 4 nous character of the Volwtead act iteelf and the manner of tte impo-| Fe : ots | SB, iC hee, aken in its opt tion t I Wition. It ie not @ jaw of the people but the “mandate of a conqueror.” |*°", Severs) years at @ Lp pen And they're the beat punishment. It can almogt consent to forego in this case The federal governs ted 6 and U4 tw the t ¢ the federal|, There are many returned service tasting butterhorne in th the principle it has long fought for. It is determined, ag Kovernment to enforce it. If the federal govrnmoent cannot enforce it,|men whe have mpplied for thaws pe city. Freshly baked each |fully as anyone, that Schmitt's trial be held without delay. thon It becomes the duty of congress to enact a prohibition law that “\heen told there were no vacancies: day, richly topped with But The Star cannot forego the moment to state that the Q apable of enforcement lin fact, many Seattle girle—not mar wugar, spiced and just {administration of justice should ALWAYS go forward with- fled wonea—who are collage grade covered with nuts. Oh, but they're good! They slay. The ecker, » | ate who have just as good expe out delay. The trial of a bank wrecker, who le s behind ; SINCERIT Y ence, ete., are teaching in the are delicious when heated him a trail of destitute families many times greater in num- ie > eh A hese MAF and served with tea ber than even a Schmitt has left, should also be without w By EDM ND VANCE COOKE VOMEN one for . yoar at delay. The trial of a grafter who dips into public charities OBREOON Wher posed in a painted proscenium, " an substitutes should also be speeded up. The trials of all prisoners should pryp pip you KNOW Bae lon sid words Hannes their dross, gece te poe 7 oe aid + ily once in a millennium verk “Eee be speeded up, so that the innocent might be freed the “ hs | that the onearmed president Comes the Realist, stark on his Cross. "AIMI. ESS sooner, and the guilty pay their penalty | of Mexico is a par Speed? By all means, But let us not delude ourselves er, and loves ‘Some of these rusticators lead an that we have done our duty by an exhibition of speed} astonish new aequaintances 1 Sroseatting criminals and let their xistence,” commented the cali “ “so ae a“ ' by doing one-hand tricks «| wentencen be ly more #6 farme: merely in Schmitt's case, Of all cases we have known in} adam we ’ hmitt’s case es we have k with cards, coins and vere than ne | ey 40," answered the hired | 918 SECOND (This came in the mall, The many years, Schmitt's case is an absolutely certainty. If} joo: pate? 415 PIKE y) ) 00} balls MRS. L ANDERSON a24| man oy th h 4 Lt DER 32a] man, “judging by the way they! si ap MADISG | Fhyme is poor, the meter is poorer; | ¢ a man was tried, convicted, and sentenced, it will be Sears Ever Sempre: fap Biotest aeaet ox hk uel mush av Lat policemen t ight to|#hoot at a deer and hit a guide, QUEEN CITY MARKETS hold their guns in readiness before | Washington Star ao be = sure justice will overtake Schmitt. Fear not other- YOUR INCOME [tiny bat anybody. It's too late to) — es eae CMON = Pipe the guy above this line, . + is > 7” a. Pre » defends are > fer you are covered ate fenilp be true, wise. It is the other cases, where the defendants are more TAX ; 4 ’ ali With @ cop peeping trom betina, | POWerful, that justice delayeth. It is there we needs must | The English word ‘Maidaad oma Phat he's making home brew? | wage a campaign for speed. When, How, What to Pay || TODAY'S QUESTION \from the Norse “huns bonde,”” mean. J ‘ —— — What should be done to PpPrens ing ni ho a ho STS This picture ts not a riddle, BY GRAHAM B. NICHOL Seattle's growing crime wav tht nmetadichn 8 totne cl chocometed | = ETHICAL DENTI Bars cas tana a Tee ‘Service Men, Japs, Married U. B. Bureau of Internal Revenue ANSWERS 0 Wise Ones | On his home brew. In tho income tax return of mar-| g R BATTENFIELD, 2413 Jack 3 ried, couples, or widows or widowers, | son at: “W. 4 at least 100 more| | The cop tells him not to worry; Women " ¢ need at lew mor must be included net fncome of de- | polloemen, trained to shoot quick and | ‘This between me and you; q | ‘i ‘ | wtradgbt.” The phone bell rang, “Hello, Re ‘He only tells the guy to hurry T is imperative that our ex-service men shall be treated) preys ALLEN, Maynasa puia-|'% ? Gabs you @ meet me sown Vth ‘his home brew. |i justly. They are entitled to employment. | ing: “Find some remedy for the law's |tow” for dinner tonight. I have a| There can be no dispute about that If, for example, the husband's tn: | 00 ht Mmeution *|real surprise for you. Don't bother | ‘The cop says he is awful dry, Mat 600, the # $600 and! 4 }to go home from ye , o| Gas that's nothing new; There are jobs that could be available for veterans that) (pm* we 1.400. wer ae na! PHTRR GALLAGHER, 9010 Bet-|Gnings peur doth | # When he don't see any rock andrye|¢re now held by Japanese. |turn must be made of the family in |‘ . Re the patrolmen be told) “Oh, Jack! I'd jo: He'll take some home brew. Other jobs are held by women—married women who ¢ of $2,300 to protect themselves first.” on my tailor suit, t Bt see |do not have to depend upon their employment for a liveli-| The fact that in this case the ex-| EARL Il. RAMAGH, 1548 W. 56th) that ovor-biouse 1 got at Cherry's BEVO |hood. ooed beghcrsat ary ’ a: NBO 8 Uittlo more ependy abant yeateraay ee it's 90 pretty that Modern methods of dentistry have made w it possible to perform practically all dental I believe you cannot have| Employers ought to consider these matters. The Star each dependent—doos not re actly like @ one-piece dress. Wt jon't you go to Cherry's some time operations without pain. The elimination dry country in a wet cli-|does not believe it wise to exclude al! married women from | husband diaper eyerdinge craecet Sher tave te a mate. — } employment. There are many of them who are in just as /"y t.o004 ana wife may each make Thorou h S ante, too. T pet an cr tee ae of pain and combinations of dental I Believe that some movies|great need of employment as service men. sevirate returns, or the combined and ‘you always admire them, Best jalis h the M. & M are fine and others rotten. Married women who are holding down jobs merely for|net income may be included in a sin |] onaracterizes oof methods in all, you cap take your own sweet specialists, such as compose cayhent T believe a policeman should|“pin money” or for added luxuries, while their husbands |#!* Joint return y transaction, amd our custe time about paying for them.” Dentists, makes this office one where you ‘shoot first and say “Howdo-| are perfectly able to and do provide decent support, ought FRR Sea ygeme gn agg te ogghe P . PIN Ceak teeta len Sime “hunter easter tha’ ar can bring your teeth troubles and get youdo” later on, if convenient.| be willing to forego their jobs at this critical time of UN-|nowever, separate returns should be prise I had for you. I did go to their absolute satisfaction. ©. I believe a man should tie| employment. Their employers should see to that, made. Thin for the purpose of com 5 store and got the classiest suit and ulaae ee Your Teeth his shoes or take a good stiff} And certainly, there should be no hesitancy in preferring|Puting correctly the surtax. which overcoat by paying just a lttle bit Wo Wh Oe eee 1 ' applits only to Income in excess of down. I know you'll like them. Just when his tongue is out.|an ex-serviceé mah to a Japanese. There ‘are many “100/tnae amount wait till you see me and the way I wi on pe aon & the| per cent pnericnes who are even joining in a crusade iD Tego arg ep Pe 5 am all togged up—well, you won't LADY ATTENDANTS MLSOTT Cnr curse of the drinking classes.|against the employment of married women, but who hang TANT ACQUAINTANCE F co Check are 1 (570 ™* . I believe that a Telow who en to Ticasabe eebiaves: There is no excuse for them.| “Handie that horse! Don't let him Aenea Naty tevet hate, de Gee te aoe ? his back against the wall|Their “Americanism” must be largely buncombe, or they | Pantie yout’ bellowed the sergeant age Lael max ane ce “must have the itch pretty bad.| could not permit themselves, for the sake of a few pennies, | jis Sait leneon. + Hg him od Peoples Savings Bank "Yen, that’s the addrens, 207 Rialto ‘ eee to favor those who never can be Americans. spurs. Gouge him” SROOND AVE. AND PIKE wT. | Bids. between Madison and Spring.| = OPEN EVENINGS Good evening! Is your gas range) 1 can't get clone enough to him! = we he oe re .. Still popping? | sereamed back the John, hysterically. “ss. | Should Men Be Graceful? [="==""=" pendent minor children whose earn ings are appropriated by the parenta to. I only have GNTUOULIAAUUUUOLUUOGUUUAUUNUUULULAHA tee, wie “Sosner7, ea] 66 EATS of strength and dexterity are generally SD: | nis poo on Or measond to pile Oo | Mar pinced, Here's an cxace-| plauded, while the more difficult accomplishment | ceiling of the Sistine chapel | ple: of combining strength and dexterity with grace and beauty P There was a young couple named Attracts less attention.” J Spiers, | Thus a magazine writer proceeds to start an argument— ity. ape Amp theres" gam “Should men be graceful?” ‘When ‘ite ? ie | He finds fault because Americans are more liberal in their Onl $25 Per Acre, on Eas Terms Her hubby cried “Scat! | applause for a Babe Ruth's home run than for a Nijinsky eaten leap on the stage; because Ted Shawn’s beautiful dancing aeaé here's another: coesn’t bring down the house in the solid manner a Tem- eee once oy vig tetas emo pleton raises havoc on the gridiron when he places his toe on to the pigskin. Located about 65 miles from Seattle on the Delta Flats between the North and South Forks of the famous Skagit River, and about 4 miles from the thriving town of Conway-Fir, on the Great Northern _ Railroad running from Seattle to Vancouver, B. C. In a district where the commercial Club of Conway-Fir But her angry dad cried, The writer comes to the conclusion that some day Amer- says: “WHERE CROPS NEVER FAIL, UNSURPASSED SOIL.” “If this baccn is fried, .jican men will strive more determinedly for gracefulness and The home of the party who took first prize on corn at the St. Paul, Minn., Corn Show. Think of it! "I'd SOONER eat bunches of grass beauty. When that time arrives there'll be few at the} ba We are offering you land as good soil as that on which this prize-winning corn was raised—and now only Be wece's iia aciltads ringside to see a Dempsey deliver a left jab to the jaw, and! $25 per acre. na 4 Mise trigt to taw! | there lt be more pi a fecgrigh & gut this may hap-| ie The Conway-Fir Commercial Club says the lands in the vicinity of their city will soon be divided into ut Kate Geeken a0 wtately and tal; ad eel ae None themselves into. civiliza-| 5 and Ng tracts and devoted to berry and vegetable raising. This is what*our proposition is the fore- it shouldn't be allowed, . "4 runner of. | in ]5-acre tracts. Y y as 5 ‘acts : me Shouldn't be Mon ARE graceful! an bs e are selling in ]5-acre tracts. You can buy as many 15-acre tracts as you want while | #14 SOONER see backs against the ay r ’ ; . . gene wall Srape is mene eh cote chopping wood, a man who knows how The U. S. Department of Agriculture ands in this district raise 500 bushels of potatoes to the acre, eee There's pad a AE hag | 100 bushels of wheat, 150 bushels of oats, 40 to 50 bushels of Canadian Field Peas per acre; that cattle pas- Travelers report many pathetto mr 1a ass pt prot exhibited HSER at-avhse end baanty ture is available during every season of the year; that poultry is a very profitable industry in this district; tage lle Bile xi eagle Peesed PPR My Cobb’ does when aiding into pret 4 Free Examination that small fruits and vegetables do fine in this\district ; that berries are grown successfully for markets; ey ins Ganges with a oo ilies lene. is to ce eretatal than "the etihinertna} that blackberries, raspberries and strawberries are successfully grown (and as this report was made in Parted hunter and in the United| Vind up used by the celebrated Mister Mays of the New BEST $2.50 GLASSES 1909, before loganberries were in vogue, we say loganberries can be successfully grown). — bh ot soe ao Pack ontene, : . on Earth In 1909 the government report gives the value of lands at from $300 to $800 per acre, and you kngw hand may have a fancy funeral and) Of course it has to be admitted that such graceful crea-| | We are one of the few optical! land has doubled in value in the past eleven years. | big carved slab of stone above his! tures as Lew Blue and Johnny Mitchell are more or less | {ior (Pathe Moikhcat, (eat realy | Skagit Delta Flats are what is known as Puget Silty Clay, and Puget Silt Loam, and the district from ve handicapped by overabundance of baseball uniform, but who | *4 | the mouth of the Stillaguamish River in the Northwestern part of Snohomish County to the Northwestern ie ete : ; | Propibition may not have done ait|is there to say that, garbed im a Ted Shadn veil, the stars| ‘y, parr iy Blige ny el part - ae commty, including the broad La Connor Flats at the outlet of the Skagit River, is composed eribed 0 us Kind OT Soll, | that some folks hoped it would, but}of the diamond could not give Nijinsky cards and spa arr, | "it has done away with the man who | an i “row f ? | ‘ ered i | is i i it is 2 kagit Rive 7 i i is ri ny eS a dco alee alg Layedleond 4 fBygedeney af oeih hg BINYON OPTICAL CO. This vf our soil as it is at the outlet of the Skagit River, and was Tasde by the silt deposited by this river. glot match machine and tell the = ¥ is: M 3 Ee 1116 FIRST AV A few weeks ago when we had the official representatives of the Utah-Idaho Beet Sugar Refinery, at _ world how his boss had it in for him | best argument is contained in this: } fen are graceful. Ever on Spris Mount Vernon, looking over the district, a prominent banker of that city told them that a Million Dollars eas watch ® mason lay a ashy of bricks? How gracefully he|____ hone Main 188 worth of seed was shipped out of Skagit County yearly. So we can safely say this is a wonderful seed It is strarlge that people send their | does it! How gracefully the structural iron worker trips REAL PAINLESS and bulb producing district. Many fields of cabbage and beets are being grown in this district by the hters to be educated in convents |#long the beam 18 stories nearer the sky than you are! leading seed houses, for seed purposes, and we feel safe in predicting that a beet sugar industry will be " when, according to plays, films and| How gracefully Bob Harper skips about the rosined floor! H i rare) 2 ‘ ; sinnll : 0 wweete 4 purest | , established in Skagit County in time to take care of the 1922 crop if the experiments fiction, the sweetest and purest fem-| How gracefully the farmer’s boy grabs a pig by the ear and D E N TI S T S sek af 1081 tate the adbae en ft - Beatles So md oid ents to be carried out the | } ‘ | ) Gmine characters are always found it i Tassocating with criminals and drug | ‘SSeS it out of the troug! Beets can be taken by scow from the dikes that will surround our lands direct to the factory at a very small cost. ‘ “addicts in the slums. Should men be graceful? eee Why waste time asking? Men ARE GRACEFUL. ‘ P “The art of pleasing,” says Haz | Ted Shawn isn’t the only work of art you can call Mister. | You can raise 15 acres of potatoes, certainly you can, Government reports show you ean raise 500 Witt, “consists tn being pleased. To — TEETH | bushels per acre. Potatoes are 60 lbs. to the bushel, this means 15 tons per acre; 15 acres or 15 times 15 Be amiable is to be satisfied with) shattered romance caused Tulsa girl to @rtmk poison. She had to soallou Lares, \ tons means 225 tons, or 4,500 sacks of 100 Ibs. each, worth $1.00 per sack or $4,500; it requires 1,200 Ibs. one’s self and others. 105 eggs to save her life. Everyone in Oklahoma seems to be rich, | of seed potatoes to plant an acre at $1.00 per 100 Ibs., $12 per acre or $180 for 15 acres; 4,500 sacks at Te, | $315; twine to sew the sacks, $25, and you have a cash outlay on 15 acres of potatoes of $520, leaving $3,980 for your work in planting, tending, harvesting and marketing your crop, or $331.66 2-8 per month In order to introdude our new for the entire year and you need only work 6 months on this crop. Be a potato king. You can do it on Senate rl eiitaet sate aeeuh Skagit Delta Lands. This is better than working for wages, loaning your money, or making investments. lightest and strongest plate known, does not cover the roof of ry - . 4 " . BY DR. WILLIAM E. BARTON |mouth; you can bite corn off the| Are we saying too much when we say 500 bushels of potatoes per acre can be raised on Skagit Delta Meathsar@ wéch.tn 1990 about the Pilgrim Fathers.) those who went to America might never sce again (or) Cueranteed 18 voare, Lands? We do not think so, for we have reliable reports that crops of from 800 to 1,000 thetals of wh nega ‘ potatoes per acre have been raised in Skagit County on Delta Lands. We shall hear more about them in 1921. Here is one | those who remained in Holland, They were able to ga« thing “which: Het every | se).2008 Who, would be on one side of the ocean and is You do not need to confine your efforts to raising potatoes, for this district will raise anything grown k . . 4 one has heard about who on the oth They counted the possible lous 82 Amalga Villing oe oft ‘ . ” ; 4 them, namely, that «| of life and the strain of mind and nerve and tuaith. | All debpiesrukliin teed tok 26 years, on the Coast of Washington and raise as much as any district in the state, acre for acre. We bought few weeks before they | And tor a littie time thelr courage nearly failed | Have 0 the | these lands cheap, We are offering you a chance to share in our good fortune and by joining us in the sated, “they were all | them The ‘ banda | development of this land you are getting land for $25 per acre that will in a very few years be bringing Aiscouraged, | and very | They had already bought the Speedwell, a ship of |Call_and See Sample Plate you $500 per acre. Will you investigate while there is land for you and while you can buy at this nearly real 0 gi sixty tons, and their friends in London counted her nd tremely low price and on easy terms? 4 bi up the enterprise alto | , a grim joke she proved to be. The | gether. Mayflower had not yet been found et eee Gece Gaels nee If you want to raise Loganberries see what we are offering you. On Wednesday, June . r " y r : ‘ P “ a 14, 1620, John Robinson, | 4.7 iis : ge rg on the preceding Saturday |& Sn ack te See It costs you nothing to come to our office and investigate, that is if you are in walking distance, if not, the pastor of the Pil he friends in England of Pilgrims in Holland mer ; write or spend a couple of 8 1-3c tokens with the city, the cars pass right by our office near the corner i - * - | found a ship that brot ta cargo of wine from Whe « ffice, be sure J ‘. ry grim congregation, then | drance, and was open to charter, and they took an|¥oU afe in the right place, Bring of Second and University. resident in Holland, | ie ad wi A he : am 3 . r Stes big ‘brother her nti Monday, and wrote to Holland’! + dahoesadahen Come in and get full information, investigate; we court the fullest investigation and can prove our ‘ f i or he Carver, thee. | rT + We not the ahtp that was fin uly Cut-Rate| statements. . in England, endeavor} | tow days till the Mayflower was disc . By We are proud of our proposition and so will you be when i en! i ) prop y you understand it fully. ing to provide for trans | tie time Carver r ved Robinsor 7 e e Carve eceived Robinson's letter the May ‘ 7 Yow is y ¥ ity ‘i ss i i portation to America, r | Don’t delay, act now. Now is your opportunity, don’t,pass it up, it means much to you, flower ac peen chartered Six weeks after Robin ES iota wlth mew 8 gs edhe okt ne Be a Potato King. SKAGIT DELTA LANDS WILL MAKE YOU INDEPENDENT. asm for the voyage had | %0"'* letter Pilgrims were and were rf leaving Holland behind forever , 7 ey nearly all gone, He | ASK FOR and GET 4 | ahi | ‘ vy said there was not a| If the whole truth were told, many good enterprises | . "a W. B. BARTON man who had invested | come to just such an hour of uncertainty and meat orlick’s 1220 Second Avenue. Open Until 9 P. M ‘3 moneyin the scheme | of despair. Neither shrewd foresight nor high moral| ‘ 5 e See NAN ATE desing ad UB wider tack in| courses io cure safeguard againet it But thet le che The Original Phone Elliott 5015. Ground Floor Location. _ bis pocket. hour of testing; and for those who then bravely face rT es beeltl cd tie to understand ‘how that | the issue, there is waiting somewhere for every fine Malted Milk feeling of despondency came about. The little colony | bh » undertaking a Mayflower, and at the end of for Infants and Invalides had come to the time of parting, and realized that | voyage a new Plymouth Rock. oid Imitations and Substitutes ¥

Other pages from this issue: