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aa AEM eget nat et lane RN RNR ON EF te <a ad Str Abe nne e and United Press Service 5.06, Im the state of Washington, - $4.50 for =—-| The Seattle Sta By mail, out of city, See per month; 2 montha, $1.60; 6 months, C 2.76) your, Outside of the state, month, @ months, er $3.00 per year, Hy carrier, city, bee & month. (An Open Letter to Governor Hart) ‘Sir: Regarding the order of the state eries board on May Srd: “Making it wful to fish for salmon in any of the ters of the Pacific ocean over which the tate has jurisdiction or concurrent juris- ; tion, or in any of the waters of the Strait Juan de Fuca west of a line drawn from Thaknoda point in Clallam county to Owen “point on Vancouver island; except that urse-seines may be operated between July Sth and August 25th, and trolling permit- " ‘ted between 6 a. m. on July Ist and 6 p, m. on August 25th, and between September 20th and November 1st, and no smaller lmon spoons than a No. 7 shall be used Onany line.” * * * The regulation on the purse-seiners, giv- him from July 15th to August 25th— days only—in which to keep up his gear make his season's living, plainly put out of business! The regulation on the troller, giving him m July 1st to August 25th, then from “eptember 10th to November 1st—where d it put him? i Let us understand first of all what a er’ is. He is a hook and line fisher- n, mostly in power-driven boats, and he es from Cape Flattery west on the Pa- fic ocean as far as 60 miles out. A hook d line fisherman does not “snag” fish— only takes those that bite his hook— they are small they are put back, the mame as the angler puts back his small in a stream. He uses a No. 7 and No. 8 spoon, that 6 and 7 inches long, and from a 10 to a 742 hook. He tries to make his season's me ng from early in the spring, when the her is settled, until the storms and igh weather come in the fall. Now you have seen what has been done iner, and what is being done the troller. Think for a minute the of this? Eas it not occurred to that there is a reason? What is generally the reason for ousting smaller fellow? MONEY and MONOP- MLY! How? Look over the regulations if the fisheries board again. it men- the TRAP—the ds __ were is nent, whose will not a vat ving to pass—where TONS of caught—large and small—lifted by m brailer and the small fish crushed the troller or MAD, where the Ovte® will get. the | SOLE BENEFIT. This is plain “open and | shut.” The idea of camouflaging by regulating THE SEATTLE STAR ‘Letters to the Editor— DENOUNCE! AT WOODL. Editor T extortions practiced by the conces- sionaires at Woodland park, 1 sin corely hope that the park commis. sionors take this matter up at once, Ketter sull, take those people by the collar and throw them out bodily Heretofore, until this year, a per. son could get a very good cup of cof feo and a decent sandwich for 16 cents, that is, 6 cents for coffee and 10 cents for a sandwich, and this same price was charged even during the war, I had occasion to be at the Es 4yY Berton He had an opinion he wished to exprem, A moral he longed to apply, Regarding such follies of feminine érews As skirts that were narrow—and high; Or openwork hosiery, waists that were sheer, And shoes that were tal) as to heel. He didn't approve of such feminine gear— A fact he was quick to reveal! He feered women's fashions as silly and vain, Unhealthy, immodest and wrong— | fish are sold by the Canadians and Japs) prices. | Remember, these are the same fish that the troller and purse-seiner for the protec-| jor about three weeke ago, and tion of salmon and immature _fish is these restaurant parasites had the JOKE, but a poor one! 1 admit that the nerve and, gall to charge me 10 cents seine a trap i small way, and should fr ® cup of coffee, such as it was, lh gerdbnet fea it the tr 1 y NEVER! [284 18 centa for a sandwich—the e restric ted—but the troller—NEVEN: bread was cut with a “rather sharp The fish code is a trap owners and A‘ knife," and the ham for the sand cannery men’s proposition, entirely, and | wich was cut with a razor, This is TRAPS ‘ NE » CAN./#h outrage, and the park commis He aps thas OWNED by the CAN= [ir tre should not allow this kind of NERY MEN! ‘ petty grafting, Whilo I was paying There are several THOUSAND men infor my “big spread,” and after the our state who have depended upon fishing — ban had waite on me had a Weel! 4 » went . le din , a gentleman sitting opposite me for a livelihood for many Aogghae Is this ID with his wife and two children, asked dustry to be controlled by a few Or A¥C ime how much I had paid. Upon tell | they all going to be let live? ing him that I was held up fo: If the board will place regulations on ee er uaead gue lath, aad i Bar ht . _|they got up and left, and as he was traps the same as on hook and line fisher-\jcving ne said, “L wonder if the men and seiners, all will have been treated park commissioners are jgetting alike and no one can object. In other |divvy on iat sai vords. i " ishes elp save! am now refe1 to the targe words, if the board Me hes bs help sate restaurant. The one at the lower end the salmon fishing industry for our state ‘or the park near Green luke is all rather than for a few big outfits, they Will |rignt ‘That same Sunday rubber regulate ALL fishing ALIKE. eee Re vs eatitag iret oto a a an -~when they cou! And if they wish to peru e — bonght on the outside, where the car try so that it may be perpetual, the RAP | tops at the main entrance, far 10 must be done away with! cents, Another vital point—Seattle and Puget 3 ave Se) Soenen ee going ve ab Sound points are today being provided with |0™,‘Pi4 King of grafting in Pine fish caught by Canadian and Japanese |no chitdren, but 1 do hate to see the fishermen on the west coast of Vancouver | working case and their children done is! 8 SW our fisher-|"P i such a way when they are out island, ‘ot pa nen ene 1 raere out. These |(ere 0m & Sunday for a little recrea men operate when allowed to g juon, and must pay such exorbitant It's hold-up, pure and sim ple. Do hope you will take this up with f|ne park commissioners, and would 11 | ike to seo that outfit thrown out bodily, CONSTANT READER. eee THE PROPOSED in Puget Sound markets FREE OF DUTY. Professor Smith says are immature caught by OUR trollers—but does your board make any mention of immature Ea - . A “ps See RT TAO NOT Tn, [ORAND BOF ms If you, as governor of our state, wish to/, sinaii space for a few remarks on do justice to its fishing industry and to its) this question, as I have read your individual fishermen and to its citizens, the aaron et ok. consumers, you will not be misled, nor sub- i Sere <0 ee eee mit to the false representations and de mands of those few powerful and itpani lh rll te i as, bat selfish and greedy interests whose ultertor | (ere i ee ne init lt hotel, mx motive is obvious—to gain control—in fact, pod an pated actoeh pagel a! monopoly—of this great fishing industry,|to the city and for those passing which is SECOND in our state, and which pep mint — for families for generations has been the SOLE source)*"y, og ' of livelihood for THOUSANDS of honest,|mast wuitabie site ls on Jackson et Commerce, the building company and the university authorities, but I Syria small fishermen and THEIR atlgy wc plgramnd Frovanredrog te nice space a ween 1 In the name of these,:and especially of the many who live here and who have asked me to write you this appeal for ajthe trains can just and i executive action in this)" st ‘he srs vital matter, I' request a prompt, clear and/|o¢ 36 or 40 feet above complete statement of your personal atti-| My experience tude as governor, and your intentions in| 'esd= me to state the premises. W. W. WASHBUEN,. *.. eos nardlnadbeeisoedear Profiteering in the Parks | DEFENDING the proposed 10-year lease for the re- freshments concession at Woodland park, President Fish- er of the park board also takes it upon himself to deny the | Will Be G ng over the pages of h 5 fry of profiteering lodged against the concessionaires by , | came across a group of pic- mes of Indian life, The first was iat of “A State Chariot,” a marvel: carrings, “his equipage of splendor, with its cintiilating jewels, and heavy-laden | jold, held me spellbound. Many citizens. The park board will have difficulty in giving the conces- sionaires a clean bill of health in this regard. Prices on var- ious refreshments had gone up in the parks over what they 1 turned | Were last year, and any number of witnesses could testify to ¥e page. An exclamation, an invol- | that fact. The concern of President Fisher in this mat- ery of delight, escaped from ‘Ah! It was the Jain tem-| le, of Calcutta, a shrine of art, bur- med with beauty. It was shea, ding, almost incredible in its) r ness, Turning to the opposite and mostly, it . I gaw “The Badri-Das Pa home of the builder, the crea the Jain. { " After the breathless beauty, the wy, the intoxicating beauty of the temple, the sight of this man with its almost ethereal splen- , its ecstacy of detail, came as to me. What wonders can be ught by mankind! What as nding architectural feats can be és, passed quickly, fleetingly my mind as I gazed on those re- their systems, I came to the most marvel- sight of all, the picture of earth's » shrine, “The Ta}-Mahal.” I) Powers. 4 it. Its simplicity, its sym- ‘@ sense of peace. Py 4 the book an@ sat back have been tried out, as it were, and found wanting. They’ve! mone literally been trying to take candy from the kiddies, and ice cream cones, peanuts, and other dainties as well. A ten-year contract under these circumstances i carriage, the wonder chariot. Sud-| be thought of. asad ing of it ally I was in India, the tomb of Taj-Bibi, in the gar- of the mansion, the Badri-Das ce, and again riding in the gold- my dream burst. It was, after N, a mockery, a false array, I bad otten the other side. 6f life, the struggling, the striv-| , the hunger of she millions of In- I saw them huddled, crawling, ding, in their dirty, dark huts, ked close together, for land in In- ing with joy. lahal, is scarce, " Again I pictured, this time with a ling of resentment, the Ta}-Mahal | all iis cool loveliness, spreading great areas, It almost repelled . It was not art, not real beauty, ith an intrinsic spiritual quality. 1 = % only cold marble, the work of “the toiling mass of natives, I saw | “groups of struggiing, sweating hu nity, in the engraved pillars and walls. I saw the oppressed wornen, | ir abject humility, subordinated, ‘Bhrinking. I saw a huddled child tide staring into space, gazing into | @ barren future, | “Must life be always this way?” T Phought, “Must there be always the ‘upper and lower strata of humanity, inequality of slaves and masters? this God's plan of life?” _T lqid aside the wonder book, the | ‘Pictures which held me as in a trance, and yet awakened me to the jest, the deepest, most vital think- I had done for much, for W. J. B. five Gahn had a sus- m that the real reason for con recessing a day was to attend! cireus. Why not? Are the laugh: | ing hyena and other menagerie anj- Mile ever to have any pleasure? \ | to have the contract at our,city parks. + be awarded to people who ing on every point in minute detail, not to people who will jump out of bounds at every opportunity and loophole. This |concession, aside from every other consideration, should not | be given to people who will do nothing more than stay just thin the law. c The contract is not yet signed. The k r i These thoughts, these to reconsider its rake? It should do Pigs Slult-ecry ae jset a worthy example in cancelling its proposed arrange- ‘tions of real life, tho theover-/ments with these concessionaires by giving notice to the ming beauty was almost unreal. world that there is one public body that is willing to punish profiteers, and would-be profiteers, to the full extent of its The profiteering angle, by itself is sufficient to make th of line satisfied me, filled me) Hark board wary of the would-be concessionaires. They | Latest returns indicate George E. Cryer has been el ‘What other side? you ask, The other| mayor of Los Angeles. And Mrs. Cryer, no doubt, Fy ao By the terms of a new agreement between Great Britain jand some African tribes, the price for wives is fixed at five the home of the spacious Taj | pounds. That's nearly $25—but a good wife is worth that State Labor Federation poll indicates that Sh the long end of the count. _ tan Summer dresses and some’re thin excuses. pe oe | The dollar is increasing in value. Tell the landlords! After several weeks of the extraordinary session of | con- |gress we want to know why the adjective. 3 j Nazimova says she’ll produce a play without a man. Sounds as impossible as a prayer without Amen. Bryan says he is going to join a law firm i? international law. ; neato Try This on Your Wise Friend How many boxes of eggs, each containing 13 dozen worth 13 cents a dozen, should be exchanged for 27 barrels of coal oil, each holding 39 gallons worth 14 cents a gallon? Answer to yesterday's: 3¢ hours, ter, however, is consistent, for the lease cannot be enter- | tained if profiteering can be proved. If the concessionaires have been guilty of profiteering, is profiteering on children, they are not fit The contract should) ave some sort of conscience in not to people who have to be bound in writ- It could very well Then At length and in f “The clothing which we To show that there's n His body was fitly In @ thick woolen And his head in a An attitude which he seemed bound to explain ull to the throng. omen are wearing,” he eried, “Was certainly made and designed othing but nonsense tnxide The average feminine mind!" And while he discoursed tn this eloquent way, He freely and fully perspired, Because, in the heat of a midsummer day, attired And a collar as stiff as a slat, With hin feet in some pointed-toed brogans that hart, black derby bat! (Copyright, 1921, by Newspaper Enterprise) A lot 0’ women never do any sewin’ except when company comes. Speakin’ uv locatin’ water with a peach tree limb, a barrel stave'll locate a hip-pocket flask. ‘Two and a half years have paserd since the armistice, and politicians WEDNESD (SETH TANNER] REMARKABLE | REMARKS The epidemic of lawbreaking now eweoping the country is @ natural re sult of the world war, aggravated by \unemployment.—Magistrate Broughy New York city. cee dren in New York state are below — normal mentally.—Dr. A. Skinner, | New York department of education, eee Indéustry joined hands with the armed forces of the nation and to gether they won the war-—Thomas adison, eee § ‘The United States today has not & friend in Europe.—Ex-Senator James — Hamilton Lewis, Illinois, eee ‘The women who wear the shortest skirts have the homeliest legs to show. The women who have the scrawnlest necks are the ones who r their dresses the lowest.—Con- gresswoman Alice Robertson, Olila- homa, eee Tt t ne part of the Ch scheme to suppress the cinemas, th atres, dancing halls, racing, alcohol! still are promising to do something and tobacco.—Father Degen, British for disabled soldiers priest. 4 Twenty to 20 per cent of the chih i Uonship between the Chamber ot | Photoplay Title Contest For Full Information Read the Seale Foeoemell gencer Daily and Sunday law would want to say that the mere fact that the Sherman antitrust law ia a law has not had a wholesome effect, altho I do not know of any man who ever went to jail for vio j lating that law.—Rep. Tincher (i, Kan rectly connected with the railway de- pots, where arrivals by train can se cure their rooms at the arrival plat form level. With a rearrangement of the pres ent administration buildings, the available space is ample for a first- class hotel, containmg all modern Jequipment, with large and small suites, commercial rooms, recreation halls, ball rooms, private dining rooms and roof gardens, ete, ete. If ‘pullt moderately high, a splendid view can be obtained from the upper floors, Perhaps the Munictpal league and the architectural associations may’ take this matter up and call for pub Uc opinion on the matter and at the| eee |THE EDISON QUESTIONS AGAIN Senator Pomerene (D.), Ohio—They jhave a textbook on the subject of |electricity which is written by an of. midshipmen tell me is #0 obscurely written that it takes an advanced | taper o1 stand it: fleer, which instructors as well as| Warning! Unless you see the name on package or on tablets student of the subject to under | YOU @fe not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty- Senator Walsh (D.), Montana—Ap-jone years and proved safe by mil- parently, it has some resemblance tojlions, Take Aspirin only as told in “Bayer” on Genuine Aspirin—say “Bayer —_—— ache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Ear ache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. All druggists sell Bayer Tab lets of Aspirin in handy tin boxes of 12, and in bottles of 24 and 1 Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidestes jmaune time take up the matter Of the questions asked by Mr, Edieon. the Bayer package for Colds, Head-|of Salicylicacid. | black amoke, that Is allowed to do #0 much damage in Seattle at the pres: | ent time and creating a very bad im. pression on visitors who are accus tomed to city ordinances governing the discharge of black smoke from | defective botlers and careless firing? WILLIAM BRUCE. | TIRES, TUBES ACCESSORIES NEW CLINGSTONE PRICES Size 28x3 ...~~<-n~-$ 9.70 iven in the wen 2 oweowe 34x4 ...4------ 20.95 34x44 . emememes 28.05 ve'Graneruve-w wig a : 35x44 Nonskid Gray Tubes $1.50 1.55 1.80 2.30 3.00 3.10 3.20 3.30 4.20 4.30 10.25 12.75 14.95 19.80 20.30 20.80 Tires—Unlimited Guarantee. All Tubes Carry Two-Year Guarantee and Are Pure-Gum Floating Stock, Luggage Carriers Easily attached to running board with thumb screws. Adjustable to any desired length. Very serviceable. Regular price 50 Our special price...........- Tire Covers-Half Price The latest, with double white stripe; fits all tires mounted on rims. For 31-inch tires..... 1.95 For 4-inch tires. . 46 For 414-inch tires. For 5-inch tires......-.0.+- $3.80 See The Post-Intelligencer Tomorrow GENUINE KAUFFMAN SILVER BEAM The finest Spotlight made. 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