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. = Wager they have losing teams, ag » trolled people The Seattle Star te ver monn: #}/ Something for us to think about. I ducing armaments, if the desire to save By mat, out of city for & montha or 99.00 per Fear, By carvier, city, ite par week per Enterprise — Ageoctatios And United Press Service. Published Daily by The Star Pubned tag Co Phone Main 600 President Wilson went to Paris to assist at its birth. Our idea, and his, was that the ar- gan to go around that the everything at the Paris conference, his own child. This was not entirely true, but there was enough truth in it to warn us against permi F we really are in earnest in our talk of re-| In the United States we talked about the) league of nations for a long time before) been born—in England-—and that, under the| cover of the mystery that enshrouded most/ernment has accepted as a fact that the) a found-| United States wants a conference to consider) jonn nos, 228 6. 14th #t—Hy | THE SEATTLE LET’S KNOW OUR OWN CHILD baiting reporter Not being able to discover, the British gov- ernment set a group of experts to work several hundred millions of dollars a year) framing a possible league, based on Wilson’s| is going to lead us to take the step, here is published utterances. Whether or not Wil-| STAR son had a clearly outlined league with him) mou? when he arrived in Paris is disputed, but the) |fact is certain that THE BRITISH DID \t ing too dumb to know I’m discour 'HAVE. Furthermore, they had anticipated ling was being passed off on Uncle Sam as|reduction of armaments. rival of the little stranger was not expectéd his views so well that he readily accepted a | « for some months. But presently rumors be-/ great part of the work they had done and he} baby had already |later freely admitted he had done so. Now for disarmament. It is planning its own program with reference to such a con- | ference. | Britain will be ready with a plan. ting such a thing to happen in this case of be the best possible plan from the interna- ‘international disarmament. What happened |tional standpoint and it may not be; but you If the conference is called, Great It may No, dear reader, the demand tor|wag that the British government, believing can bet that it will be the best plan possible More port business in Seattle is not fo be reared as official recognition “Of the win OUR DAILY FICTION | ‘ | one UR PAU FICTION |, ,{deavored to learn just what we meant by @ couple who lived In an apart | that name. ent. They bad many friends, and)" Bice eee Re Yap se Be @f% they were invited to parties. At ————$—$$$___—__—_— they felt that they must give Pavers wwre'st'be tees) ~—- Dentists, Plumbers and ‘@ was too risky to make home brew Qn apartment e. So they| ‘a intd a bu ow. And they/ A h Br oe nena rchitects = ey fee ee cen yo I’ you have a toothache you don’t call in the plumber. t And when you're building a house you want an architect Shey were told that the stuff didn’t wet to taste right till the sevemth Gay. They were extremely self-con lon the job, not a dentist or a student of theology. It is significant that the architects of this city, after an investigation of the Roosevelt high school plans, indorse it las being as economical as the uses to which the building is |to be put, require. 7 On the second day, they didn’t go rot the cellar. On the fifth day, took a look to see if the bot e still the yn the sixth - day, they Gane « ‘agp iid It is further worthy of note that the criticisms directed But they didn't open a single bot | against the Roosevelt high school by Directors Shorrock oa ti after the sun set om the} and Santmyer are of a different character than the vapor- - ea jings that have been emanating from certain other quarters. Shorrock’s objection is not that Roosevelt high school is causing extravagant expenditures, but it is that the grade |schools need prior attention. Santmyer’s objection is that ithe east end of town will soon need a high school as well need a «ick | as the north end. | The Star can see the importance of the poifits raised by these gentlemen. The grade schools, indeed, must have At the theatres and cabarets jevery consideration possible. ‘There Hail “squabs,"~sans clothes| Roosevelt high school, the grade segs are to be affected “seir Reaggrorge injuriously, the situation is mightily embarrassing. ip bust er Myo ond home ite gps ™| “However that may be, and however the board members may differ on that score, they are not divided upon the question of furnishing decent buildings schools and grade schools. And that is really an point at issue in the Roosevelt high school. The ‘high schools are overcrowded, much more congested in percentage of total Provision must be made. Shall it be made in a niggardly way, or shall it be made in a way that is fitting for OUR children? No one who believes in the public school system can calmly sit by while the assault is’ being made,’not upon the Roosevelt high school alone, but insidiously on the school system in general. Taxes are high, but we cannot be true to ourselves if we cut them only at the expense of our children. “We are going insane on education,” is a ery school op- ponents are attempting to popularize. You, who love, the public school idea, beware of the poison they are spreading. They want you to repeat their slogan. They are working psychologically on you to make you believe by constant repe- tition that which you should not. The schools of our cpuntry, whatever their failure in some respects, have been its greatest institution. Yet there are ge SAUCE FoR THE Goose Mot ‘tired busi. ut » girls get wiry, now «a then PR tell a world we do. Now why not a chorus of shapely be-mates, Por a tusiness girts’ matinee? gne a cod—the Adonis type, @ome popular show, I'n say.) essential Be bring 27 your he-vamps from every ciime, To give as the thrill that’s due; Ef it’s a panacea for the tired busi- Ress man, “Twill help the poor working girl, too. LEILA V. DUNCAN, 6320 Sixth Ave. 8. eee HOW FAR BACK CAN YOU REMEMBER? an We can remember when actresses’ 1 used to come in packages | cigarets eee If the fellow who took our pros. Derity away will return it no ques Hons will be asked. 4 see Four’ Nebraska towns Wave de- )@ided to bar Sunday baseball. We'll ae ; ‘ ye |people who would gladly abolish all public schools in order LOST BY A aed | fg 18 RIGHT} ve taxes. Just now the attack is on the Roosevelt high school. Next time it may be on the grade schools. Or on free text books. Check this baneful influence NOW. Nip it in the bud. Lost—A small purse containing $6 ~ piece and an evening gown.— jertisement in Peabody (Kas.) Gazette. eee We lamp in the public prints that ® charity organization of Cleveland | Announces disease is the cause of Most of the poverty in the city. Sev- @ral years ago a New York aharity Society made a similar announcement| Pecfore we fought “the war to end war,” we had a standing army of g@nd an organization of physicians 16 | 60900. Having come aut vietorioua, we now need a standing army of 175,- Gided to investigate. After working | 000, says Secretary Weeks. Will somebody page Mr. Kinatein? it's too for several weeks a committee re-| deep for ordinary mathematicians, Ported that poverty caused the dis. @ane. And so far as we have learned| of course, now that Henry Albers has admitted he was soused, he's going there has been no decrease since] to be promptly sent to the hoosegow for being “drunk and disorderly.” Of tien in either the gickness or| course. Poverty. The postmaster of Jamestown, Kas., bas been unable to open his @afe for more than a year. That's eer than a safe could be kept in Seattle. Some bandit would Welcome, Shriners, make yourselves at home. We're dawgawn gill to see you, little red hats and all. War docen’t pay unless the vanquished does.—Detroit Pree Press. The wages of sin are about the only ones that are not being reduced. Washington Post. Be sure to open it the second week o- . TAKES NO © A people never sink quite as low aa their musical comedies THIS CH © It has come t Petrified bones of a tiger dug up in Utah, We have the blind kind now. Bain boys have b We are returning to normal. | when the tip is only a dime. A waiter occasionally says “Thanks!” even ‘The democrats of the natiow t kick of the nation took the d e “kick” out of our lives, and then the t of our lives.—-Columbia Record, What Purope appears to be pe aboutia that Uncle Sam wouldn't take on. |any seat in the league of nations except a ryserved acat.—Manila Bulletin, tions will » Chiet of | unty Beraia | e | Some men who came to Washington talking about what they did for their political ticket are beginning’*to wonder what they'll do about the rail-~ road ticket.—Washington Post. A Milwaukee w other da an who died the | And now comes the season of the trowel blister, the hoe lumbago and the carpet beater's wrist can od, toddled, with her hair, s off won Soon the well-known raspberry will make itself apparent, in pie and on brows, used a lipstick or wore hairnet | Stockings shirt bosom see The New York enme famous r fever heard of Einstein js not a Pough-neck, as you might have sup. . posed, but a Harvard. graduate UDGE ROBERT H. LINDSAY is dead, Which, of cow is a good defense and Seattle joins his family and Elk- phierican firm got a nice dom in paying tribute to his memory. He made as Washiaton t5, was one of those rare men who, tho 82 at Gatised mun at| his death, retained the spirit of youth till war? rd the pipe the final call came. He lived in the pres- refuses becatuse “The application for ent generation, not in a distant past, loved Ripethirend was to be of linen, of his fellow-beings and added to the good @tton Sait citizenship of his city, state and nation. Hata off tothe New York police. They've f nother man who didn't kill If, in the building of the! students than the grade schools. | Observations Letters to the Editor— | FAVOR FULL PENALTY FOR PROuL EVADERS Kditor The Star; In your call we end the folowing “We, the members and congress jtion of he Firet Church of the Nazarene of Seattla, hereby declare that we are unreservedly In tayor of answer to } |bition law, Since the law came into effect, our country i in much bet ter condition. There is lens crime We favor the infliction of the full penalty of the law against bootler- | core and we favor everything which will help us in the persistent, rigid jenforcement of the law and WE WILL SUPPORT THE OFFICERS jwno BNronce ir” | The above was adopted by a unaal mous rising vote and I was author- ined to send it to The Star. i. D, BROWN, 110 W. Gum St OTHER SIDE OF BABY GLORIA CASK Editor The Star: WIN you per lion of the petition going to New York to Uberate the ,~wornan in the rigid enforcement of the prot | and more happiness and prosperity. | that nothing concerned the United States so from the British standpoint. |deeply as the idea of a league of nations, en-/are to be praised for their foresight. But what is our own government doing? (SETH T. being clone to her heart. best bet is one that cures us @ bettin’, Th’ law makers don’t seem to be able to keep up with th’ crooks, Could not those jurors, and that for both high | mit Me An expression of my opin-| Woman joded, Joan BH. Norris, be | peceugted to keep the woman where she can explate her crime justly, Aubure prison en pcedunt of her/ "M4 fet some good, responsible Gam- jbelng the mother of a babe? Qh, I cannot but think che is Det worthy af such a freedom. df he should be pardoned, what about the father, who was onty an accessory to her crime? She ureed him on to kill the boy and |when the Instrument In his hands ayy, falled to kill quickly enough, took a file and baat the bey ti insensibility, kicking him down the hill, leaving him dead, an she | thought. nent he denied urging his attentions upon her after her marriage What a cruel nature must have been hidden in her heart, covered, and kindness? She is certainly not a fit person to mise her child. If the murder had been an ordinary one—tt would neem to deserve pity, in some de. gree—but the atrocious manner of her killing sears the heart of most of us who claim to have at least & modicum of buman sympathy. A poor excuse in given that, be cause of prenaney, she was in an normal state of body and mind i more inclined to commit a yrutal crime than if in her usual normal condition. Of all the times In a woman's life when the world looks lovely to her should be and often is the |months she lives with an innocent | Alasks Building. home of The Seandinaviae Amencan Bond unti! then, with a crust of beauty! ia b | orimin? ly adopt the wring it up in babe Gloria, and ignorance of itn Will not the govertor of New York see this matter in a truer and saner light than t# now thrown upen it? aQtestion that I have presented in t ee When he returned to conaciouy | Deposits in this bank are guar- anteed by the Washington Bank Depositors’ Guaranty Fund of the State of Washington. In not the side of the his brief article, worth considering jour paper, ich hae always she| been fair to publish both sides of | nt©l any important question? MRS. CLARA SMITH, Anacortes, Wash, Lutheran Bible Conference MAY 1-6 Dally Seastons—Afternoon, 2-4 Bvenings—s Gethésmane © Lutheran "Simple Salvation” an Church Virginia How Do I Know lan?” Divine Inatitutl crowds ha conferences attended n Spokane, FEDE Your Deposit Should Be Guaranteed Our Only Branch Is at _ The Scandinavian American. Bank Seattle, Washington The British gov-| you ure. The British "” .' RAL RESERVE — wy } | TODAY'S QUESTION How do you overcome discourage | ANSWETS A, OLSON, 6719 17th ave, N—Ty 4 M. W./BEAN, 4900 W. Stevens at |—I'm looking for that formula my if, G ave 4 Fi 46 You *hicago Me way, EN WICK travel a lo my boy n the end that the Jone m1 appy is to think N, H. CLARK, 6212 18th ave, N. BE On, it wears off ' thinking about the poor devils who don't even hold @ balliff's job REMARKABLE | REMARKS “The ob ws effort of girls to attract © short drean) crane ts upne ughttul peo | Pauline Lor DOU ACL ORR, “The world’s greatest philan thropint re those who give out of their poverty."—The Rev. Otto J.| | Lyons, Port Huron (Mich) clergy man. eee “There must be more religion In the homes of America if divorce is to be curbed.”"—De, William F Hovis, Kansas City clergyman eee | “tigamy is more prevalent than any other form of crime at the pres ent tme.”—Justice Salter, London. eee “Women will be mobiliced and nent to their places just lke men in the next war.”—Will Irwin, writer, eee “Of every 20 factorien destroyed in Francg in the war, we have recon struct4d #ix—Rene Viviani, former | French premier | oe ° | If a man coughs in your face, bust him in the nose and tell the judge he attacked you with a deadly wenpon—the pneumoroceus germ Health Commirsioner Robertson, Chi cago. dancing every Saturday Bivd. Park It’s alongway in quality from ordi tea to fine tea, but i 's only a way in Why not drink Hilvilla and enj the best’ e infa! cies of the infamour cults. he will Ballard the forcement They're Public Ledger During the middie ages the practice lof law was confined chiefly to the | clersy SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1921. al “STUDY WITH AN-EXPERT Business lege department of prohibition en all bruin. — Philadelphia A Boudoir Conversation “What is that exquisite odor? It reminds me of a French extract I bought before the war and which cost $10.00 for two ounces.” “My dear girl, the fragrance you notice comes from that atomizer on my dressing table. 1 spray my linen and clothes with it every day and naturally 1 like it, it is a breath of Spring.” “Yes, but what is it? It must be expensive. Don’t ~~ be so secretive.” a “Tt is no secret and as for expense it costs less than $1.50 fora 6 oz. bottle and is known to the world as ED. PINAUD’S LILAC!” Every woman should try this delightful French per- fume for handkerchief, atomizer and bath, It is the world’s standard perfume. PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD American Import Offices ED. PINAUD Bldg. New York If you really want beautiful hair, use ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC Famous in France for a Century, and used the world by discriminating men and women. baat, YOUR COPY IS FREE It costs you nothing to know where to buy Pa- cific Northwest products. The Seattle Chamber of , Commerce and Commer- cial Club has compiled the that shows the purchaser just what is produced in this part of the coyntry and who produces it. , Before buying, consult the Commod- ity Directory. Then you can be sure of knowing how to help keep Pacific Northwest Dollars at home, where they belong. Why send outside for articles pro- duced “= here in the Pacific North- west? hen price and quality are eeael, why not patronize your neigh- Yr When you get your Free copy of the Commodity Directory, use ‘if every day. You will be surprised at the hun- dreds of articles of almost every con- ceivable kind produced in this section of the country. _ As each manufacturer and producer in the Pacific Northwest prospers, so will you and your business. Ask for your copy of the Commodity Directory, Free at CHAMBER og COMMERCE Ninth Floor, Arctic Building Third Ave. at Cherry St.