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ile ety SSS The Seattle Star oat 8 ee $5.00, m the state of Washington, Outatte of the state, 800 per menth, 94.00 for @ months or $4.00 per year, ty carrier, efty, bec 8 month : responsibility resting on the directing heads of a bank is a sacred responsibility, : the word “sacred” can be used at all as applying to business affairs. > For the banker is entrusted with the money of other persons, thousands of them. HH is entrusted, moreover, with the control of the credit resources of the community ‘and thus wields a power that is nearly all-important over every line of industrial and commercial activity. “The banker ought to be a trained, conscientious, studious professional man. To be ‘Buccessful he must be conservative. Ie should be “human,” yet able to say “no.” He must, above all else, be a banker first, last and solely; he must not play “side-lines” "OF engage in other businesses. “The trouble with the Scandinavian American banks of Tacoma and Seattle—a trou- that the whole state now must share—was that they were run for years by men i! were not bankers according to the above definition. “hese banks were run recklessly, by plungers, by men who did have side-lines, by "men whose judgment of loans was not sound, by men who were not rightly trained ‘and who lacked the feeling of deep responsibility TO THE PUBLIC and to their de- ' The state banking laws must be corrected so that banks can be conducted again in this state on such a wildcat basis. the 33,000 depositors who lost money in the two suspen- must insist that the remedy be prompt and thoro. Weuld you go with him again Let’s Decorate UN death do us part"? Independence Day ts nearty here, Or would you prefer your flower but the casual visitor to Seattle arden and your other constant would think, from the appearance ef the city’s streets, that we were about to celebrate Friday, the 13th. Where are the decorations, the professor of law “If you haven't a pretty for a client, get one for a ; if you can't get a pretty for » witness, get an ugly eo but have s woman on your More people reported jumping their board bilia Idle roomera PRR ach 0 Sale ie he ematarsteR ats ents mA ARN IE NAPA AA» ae THE SEATTLE STAR i WHEN PATRIOTISM WAS } FORGOTTEN We have not forgotten, empectally , those of us who were present, that at the close of the war the packers came down from Chfeago and went to the wecretary of war and protest: the second tree had been (Continued From Page 1) to the winds. But after oe amet the meat tee won nor |left behind the distance needed, but that it should all be sold to the next was considerable, and it in foreign countries, and bow the was then that Numa walked from automobile dealers protested that) ing concealing cover of the jungle any surplus should not be sold here, and, seeing hin quarry apparently Representative MoKenasle CR), Uhl inten before him, raised his tall muiffly erect and charged, MR HARDY PHILOSOPHIZES Two menthe-twe lene, 7 How times change and men! oaths filled with hunger, with change with them. How sordid pelf-| tah 4 sordid politier debase all|thiret, with hardship, with disp- rg Agee sy cw |pointment, and, greater than all, that is noble In men How they) 0 with gnawing pain—had — panned tond to destroy the righteousness | ne een of the Apes learned ae Pecoragy Be Peon Representa rom the dary of the dead German tine . captain that his wife still lived, A brief investigation In which he was enthusiastically aided by the Intetii Mast African expedition revealed the fact that an attempt bad been made to keep Lady Jane in hiding in the tntertor, for reaxons of 0 a There ‘has been be” Slarming .ta only the German high comman crease in the last year of the num ber of women and girls who smoke ciragets habitually.-Miss May B Mackin, Detroit W, C. T. U. worker. eee might be cognizant, In charge of Lieutenant Obergats end a detachment of native German troops she had been sent acrone the borter into the Congo Free State. Starting @ut alone in search of her, Tarzan had succeeded In find ing the village in which she had been incarcerated, only to learn that she had escaped months be- fore, and that the German officer had dimppeared at the same Ume. From there on the stories of the chiefs and the warriors whom. he quizzed, were vague and often con- tradictory. Even the direction that the fugitives had taken Tarzan could onty guces at by piecing to gether bits of fragmentary evidence gieaned from various sources. ‘The terrible and shocking langnage used by certain women is one of the most perplexing problems of civilize ton.—-W. B. Luke, London magis trate, cee Nothing on earth Is In more need of reconstruction than the American home, — Mra. Christine Frederick, woman author, THE GRAVE AND GAY ‘The men of the M. E. church con gregation will hold « frolic next Sat urday afternoon at the church for the purpose of putting the grave yard in order. All are invited.-| Sininter conjectures were forced Hackettstown (N. 1) Gazette which be made in the village. One flags and streamers, the big por traits of presidents and generals, the pictures of the signing of the The folks who keep the tops up Upon thetr motor cars, By day they mins the runshing By night they miss the stars; ‘The high hilis and the heavens, ‘The tall and stately trees, Ah, folks who keep the tops up ‘Win but a glimpse of these! glad of t.—Walnut Kidge ‘The folks who keep the tops up Miss af the gypey tun a sales of everyday proves the 9 yours Nine out “social”; = Deople are moon and Uh ta ther trees on the That, in itself, sowty owing. fathers and to the chant of question marriage Is the miller boy whollves 1.0, cquivalerit to blasphemy, the wheel swings round = rng Siar cannot agree with hand in good will, one those freeandcasy souls- (mostly and the other in the cigish maids and the: oF discontented ma move lerward trons) who would abolish the in bana stitution in toto. Parents, chil dren, society all need some form of Day of July. time? Perfectly Happy with so a soa, naa shouldn't they pass half thelr time untll his Fire ing pr oi Bos ae ‘on a "Part, hold down separate jobs, Crackers gave out, save that he met “Happy e 3 . nape, and have se groupe |® boy who had a FiveCent Cracker Guess, has brought purest joy to that made more noise than his Whole millions than any tango or Bunch. or shimmy trot ever did or Better, And the next year he bought EE We have s sophisticated, rush generation with us, a genery lath Gites et 4, that %%% Involved, and 2 little leas of » verboten—“obry” — Mrs, Grundy- ruled public contract? / that cost Twenty-Five Cents, wiggle and the writhe; and not bo going, fore 99, or thereabouts, will these mervous, sparkling, jazzing ones have time for an hour's medita tion, self-introspection or thought While they're making Americans owt of immigrants they'd better make emigrants out of @ few Americans. the store. Therefore StnDodgers & Berton B: T CAME to pass in the days of old that a small boy bought for himself a Bunch of Fire Crackers that he might shoot them off on the Fourth And he was And he determined to go him One| pasa Ten-Cent Cracker; and in the year that followed he bought a Cracker And by that time he was the admiration of all the boys, But he considered that now he had them they would all buy Twenty- Five-Cent Orackers in the next year, and there were no larger ones in jd he study the mech: | anism of the Fire Cracker, and he) was incontrovertibie proof that U.ene people were maneaters; the other, the presence in the village of various articles of native Ger- man uniforms and equipment. At grent risk and in the face of surly objection on the part of the chief, the apeman made a careful in spection of every hunt in the village from which at least a little rey of hope resulted from that he found no article that might have belonged to his wife. Leaving the village he had made bis way toward the southwest crossing, after the moxt appalling bardehips, a vast waterless steppe covered for the most part with éemee thorn, coming at last & district that bad probably never oy ‘The folks hwo keep the tops up I do not understand; Burely tery do not fear the thought Of growing bronaed and tanned; Surely they cannot be afraid Of winds and wun that give The gift of happiness and heath That make Lie good to live! A car should be Afventura, A chariot of Romance ‘That carries you by magic roads About the world’s expanse; Bot folks who have their tope ep must be in this direc seek her, since by & process of elimination he oad re duced the direction of her Might to only this poesibility, How she had cromed the morass he could not guess and yet something within seemed to urge upon him belief that she had cromed ft, and that if she still lived it was hers that whe must be sought, But this un- known, untraversed wilt was of vast extent; grim, forbidding moun: taine blocked his way, torrents tumbling from rocky fastnewes im- pertied his progres, and at every turn he was forced to match wits vora that he might procure sus tenance, Time ané again Tarzan and Nu- ma stalked the same quarry and now one, now the other bore off the prize. Tarzan often wondered why fn so rich @ country he found no evi- dences of man and had at Iast come to the conclusion that the parched, thorncovered steppe and the hideous morasses had formed a suf- ficient barrier to protect this coun- try effectively from the inroads of rolled the paper around the powder, and made a Fire Cracker aa lar; a a length of Stove Pipa, And it all went exactly as he had anticipated, sve that the Coroner had to get into his Ford Car and ride over about seven townships be- fore he could decide whore to hold the Inquest, Now, I have lived long stnce that day, and I have seen the process re | Seaees more than once, I have in men spreading them- selves like Green Bay Trees, and determined to make more Notue than their neighbors, and to do things that the neighbors could not sur- pass thru the mountains and, com- ing down upon the opposite side, had found himself in a country practically identical with that which he had left. The hunting was good and at a water hole in the mouth of @ canyon where it debouched upon a tree-covered plain, Bara, the deer, fell an easy victim to Coffee down in, Highost prices, 40c and 38a, Lowest price, 20a. M. A. Hansen, 40 Economy Market. Advertisement. Rev. M. A. Matthews Will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled And several times in the history of the human race I have had occasion to look around to find those same people, and lo, they could not be found. Yoa, T searched diligently for them, but they had fired their big Cracker and blown up with it, Now, this have I observed concern- ing those men who seem to outdo their neighbors, that an Whole Bunch of Medium-Sized Fire Crack- ers costeth no more than One Great Cracker, and that the Bunch lasteth longer, and #0, socmetimes, doth the man who fireth it WILLIAM E. BARTON. On June 7, 1898, Andrew Witl- fam Fuerlinger decided he was tired trying to support a family on $15 a week. He quit his job tn Peart River, N. J. went home, threw his fac tory pay envelope on the floor, walked out the door and disap- peared. The other day Mrs. Feurtinger, now 72 years old, was weeding the little garden back of her cottage. She looked around and saw her long-lost husband standing behind her. “I've made a home in Connectl- cut,” sald he. “And I've come to take you there with me.” “I can’t decide what to do,” says Mrs. Fuerlinger, “I've lived in Pearl River 50 years. 1 don’t think I can Jeave, I'm too old to make new friends and new gardens, And —who'll take care of my flower garden here?” Ladies, what would you do if your husband disappeared, re mained away 23 years, then came back to you and wanted to start Hectic hasteners to nowhere! How to Hold Your Youth From time immemorial, persons wearing the century mark have given advice on longevity. Some of it is good, and some Is not. * <A real gem comes from a 99- year-old Clevelgnd woman: “Make friends with young people and keep up your interest in events of the day.” The advice—to keep young in spirit—is good whether your goal is long life or pleasant life. Pointed remarks get blunt en ewers. inclusive, in the form of they be arranged? Beat the swords into fly swat- By GronGce lot of people are eating yeast ply the power of advertising they'll eat wallpaper cleaner. peventeen we: 5 Season Tickets, Clay & Company. / B—The house for Jul ll, anyhow, the underdog usu- gets what he wants—sym- bought Powder, and Fuse, and Paper of what it may all be about. Mighty Jf Youy Husband and Glue, and ‘he took Clay to stop| few of them will reach half ninety Di: d the ends of the Cracker, and he without a breakdown. isappeare alt he Try This on Your Wise Friend By arranging, in a certain way, the numbers 1 to 9, horizontal, vertical or diagonal, will total 15, How must Answer to yesterday's: 37 (multiplied by 3 is 111; by € ts 222, etc), AT THE CORNISH Roy at Harvard THE REPERTORY COMPANY Maurice Browne and Ellen Van Volkenburg With their New York east lately a jury ond M First Northwestern Seano With the Comedy THE PHILANDERER Thursday Evening, July 14, 8:15 Regular performances each week, Thursday, Friday and, Sat- urdey evenings and Saturday matinee, during the” acasGa of six performances, $10.00—on sale at Sherman the Fine Arts Society and tickets may be purchase: or at the Gallery, 1213 Fourth Avenue, * ” “The Church's Relationship te Gevernment” In the evening he will Gincusa the nubject, PUBLIC 18 INVITED First Presbyterian Church Seventh and Spring a@ square, each line, whether coring at the Garrick, For babies tortured by eething or stomach Yash, eczema, etc., there is immediate relief in a jar of Resinol Ointment. Ne @marting or stinging when applied. Gives just the cooling toweh to produce comfort and sleep. ald ia two eines b7 all dregziots, Resinol ee Plays, Opening BERNARD sHAW 14 and 16 has been irchased by rom members CAA EER SMES SALLI: MAELO Ls EET OEE A AEE REC - ee EDGAR RICE BURROU! TARZAN THE TERRIBLE | BEGIN READING THIS RE Copyright, 1921, a the ape-man's cunning. It was just af dusk. The voices now and again from various direo- ned and again from yarioun dirce- tions, and as the canyon afforded among ita trees no comfortable re treat the apeman stoulderod the carcass of the deer and siarted downward onto the piain, At ita oppenite side rose lofty treee—a Breat forest which murrested to his pragticed eye a mighty jungle Toward this the apeman bent his step, but when midway of the plain he discovered standing alone such & tree as best wulted him for a Night's abode, swung lightly to tts branches and, presently, a comfort- able resting place, Here he ate of the flesh of Bara and when satisfied carried the bal once of the carcass to the opposite wide of the tres, where he deposited it far above the ground in a necure Place, Returning to his ergch he settled himself comforttably for sleep and in another moment the Toark of the lions and the howling of the lenser cats fell upon deaf ears. The orual noises ef the Jungle componed rather than disturbed the apeman, but an unusual sound. however, tmperceptible to the awak ened ear of civilized man, ecidom failed to impinge upon the con- sciousness of Tarzan, however deep his siomber, and so it was that when the moon was high a sudden tush of feet crows the grassy car pet in the vicinity of his tree brought him to alert and ready activity. Almost beneath him, racing to ward his tree was what at first fiance appeared to be an almont naked white man, yet even at the first instant of discovery the long, white tall projecting rearward 44i not encape the apeman. Hehind upon him by various observations; the fleeing figure, and now so clos*|man was as to preciude the possibilty of its quarry escaping, came Numa, the lion, in full charge. Voiceless the prey, voiceless the killer; as two epirits in a dead world, the two moved in silent swiftness to- ward the culminating tragedy of this grim race. Even as his eyes opened ani took in the scene beneath him— even in that brief instant of per ception, followed reason, Judgment, and decision, #0 rapidly one upon the heels of the other that almost simultancously the apeman was in midair, for he had seen @ whiteskinned creature cast in a | mold similar to his own, purnted by Tarsan’s hereditary enemy. So clone was the tion to the fleeing man-thing that Tarzan bad no time on Numa’'s back and the blade was sinking again and again into the navage side. Nor was the man-thing lelther longer fleeting, or idie. He too, creature of the wild, had sensed on the instant the truth of the miracle of his saving, and turning in Dis tracks, had leaped forward with raised bundgeon to Tarzan's asnist- ance and Numa's undoing. A singie terrific blow upon the fiattened skull of the beast laid him insensible, and then ae Tarzan’s knife found the wild heart a few convulsive shudders and a sudden relaxation marked the passing of the carnt vore, placed his foot upon the car cas of his kill and, raising his face to Gore, the moon, voiced the sav- fagt victory cry of the bull ape. As the bideous scream burst from the apeman's lips the man-thing stepped quickly back as in sudden we, but when Tarsan returned his hunting knife to its sheath and turned toward him the other saw in the quiet dignity of his demeanor no cause for apprehension. For a moment the two stood ap praising each other, and then the man-thing spoke, Tarzan realized that the creature before him was uttering articulate sounds which ex Pressed in speech, tho in a language with which Tarzan was unfamiliar, the thoughts of a man possessing to &@ greater or leas extent the same powers of reason that he possessed. In other words, that tho the creature before him had the tail and thumbs and great tors of a monkey, it was, in all other respects, quite evidently & man. The blood, which was now flowing down Tarzan's side, caught the crea- ture's attention. From the pocket pouch at his side he took a smull bag and approaching Tarzan indi- cated by signs that he wished the ape-man to lie down that he might treat the wound, whereupon, spread. ling the edges of the cut apart, he | sprinkled the raw flesh with powder ‘from the little bag. The pain of the wound was as nothing to the ex- |quisite torture of the remedy but. accustomed to physical suffering, the ape-man withstood it stoically, and in a few moments not only had the bleeding ceased but the pain ae well, In reply to the soft and far from unpleasant modulations of the other’s voice, Tarzan spoke in var- fous tribal dialects of the interior as well as in the language of the great apes, but it was evident that the man understood none of these, See ing that they could not make each other understood, the pithecanthrop- us advanced: toward Tarzan and placing his left hand over his own heart Inid the palm of his right hand over the heart of the ape-man. To the latter the action appeared as a form of friendly greeting and, being v@sed in the ways of uncivilized races, he responded in kind as he realized it was doubtless intended that he should. His action seemed |to satisfy and please his new-found jacquaintance, who immediately fell to talking again and finally, with his head tipped back, sniffed the air in the direction of the tree above them and then, suddenly pointing toward the carcass of Bara, the deer, he touched his stomach In a sign language which eyen the densest might interpret. With a wave of his hand Tarzan invited his guest to partake of the remains of his sav- GHS’ GREATEST STORY D-BLOOD NOVEL TODAY Cc. Meat Co. nimbly as @ little monkey to the) them from courting danger useless lower branches of the tree, made his |ly, whone lives are sufficiently filed way quickly to the flesh, amdsted|with danger in their ordinary row always by his long, strong sinuous tine of feeding and mating. tail As the rising sun dispelled the The pithecanthropus ate in #-| shadows of the night, Tarzan found lenoe, cutting small strips from the! himself upon the verge of a great deer’s loin with hie keen knife, From | forest into which bie guide plunged, his crotch in the tree Turaan|taking nimbly to the branches of watched his companion, noting the |the trees thru whieh he made his preponderance of human attributes way with celerity of long habitude which were doubtless accentuated and hereditary instinct, but tho ald |by the paradoxical thumbs, great ed by a prehenslble tall, fingers, and toes, und tail, | toes, the man-thing moved thru the Me wondered if this creature was forest with no greater case or surety representative of some strange race, than did the giant apeman. or if, what seeemd more likely, but| It wae during this Journey that an atavisam. Wither supporition| Tarzan recalled the wound in his would have seemed preposterous | side inficted upon him the previous enough did he not have before him | night by the raking talons of Numa, | the evidence of the creature's exist-|the lion, and examining it was sur- jence, There he was, however, a prised to discover that not only ‘tailed man with distinctly arboreal it painless but along its edges were hands and feet. His trappings, gold no indication of inflammation, th encrusted and jewel studded, could results doubtless of the antiseptiq) have been wrought only by skilled | powder his strange companion hi artisans; but whether they were the sprinkled upon it. | work of this individual or of others| They had proceeded for a mile o |like him, or of an entirely differene | two when Tarzan’s companion cam race, Tarzan could not, of course,|to earth upon a grassy slope | determine, |neath a great tree whose branches His meaj finished, the guest wiped | overhung a clear brook. Here they his fingers and lips with leaves|drank and Tarzan discovered the jbroken from a nearby branch,| water to be of icy temperature that looked up at Tarzan with a pleasant | indicated ite rapid descent from the amile that revealed a row of strong | lofty mountaing of its origin. white teeth, the canines of which Casting aside bis loin cloth and werg no longer than Tartan’s own,| weapons Tufzan entered the little spoke a few words which Tarzan | pool beneath the tree and after a judged were a polite expression of moment emerged, greatly refreshed thanks and then sought a comfort-|and filled with a keen desire to able place in the tree for the night.| breakfast. As he came out of the The earth was shadowed in the! pool he noticed his companion ex- @arkness which preceeds the dawn |amining bim with a puzzled expres when Tarzan was awakened by «| sion upon his face. Taking the ape violent shaking of the tree in which |man by the shoulder he turned hira jhe had found shelter. As he opened around so that Tarzan’s back was hie eyes he saw that his compan-|toward him and then, touching the }ion was aleo astir, and glancing |end of Tarzan's spine with his fore around quickly to apprehend the/finger, he curled his own tail up |cause of the disturbance, the ape | over bis shoulder and, wheeling the astounded at the sight|ape-man about again, pointed firs® iwhich met his eyes. at Tarzan and then at his own cam The dim shadow of a colomsa) | 44! appendage, a look of puzziemen leorm reared close beside the tree and | Upon his face, the while he jabbd he saw that !t was the scraping of '¢xcitedly im his strange tongue. the giant body against the branches, The @peman realized that prob that had awakened him. That such |*bly for the first time his compam @ tremendous creature could have|!0n had discovered that he was taik approached so closely without dis | less by nature rather than by accident turbing him filled Tarzan with both | @"d so he called attention to his own wonderment and chagrin. In the gloom the ape man at first con- ceived the intruder to be an ele phant; yet, if #0, one of greater pro- portions than any he had even be- fore seen, but as the dim outlines became lees indistinct he saw on a line with his eyes and 20 feet above the ground the dim sflhouette of a grotesquely serrated back that gave|#"d weapons and entered the pool, His ablutions completed and his were of different species. The fellow shook his head dub ously as tho entirely unable to com prehend why Tarzan should differ so from him, but at last, apparently own lips to enjoin silence, attempt-| ach instance ed by pulling on Tarzan's pean zan readily discovered indicate that they should leave at|2@mes of these” once, ture's native language, Realtzing that he was in a strange | Could but smile at country, evidently infested by crea-| Si" Upon the part of his new-fous tures of titanic size, with the habits |*©vuaintamce to impart to him and powers of which he was entire.|"wuctions that eventually migt ly unfamiliar, the apeman permit-|/@4 to an exchange of thought ted himself to be drawn away. With |{Ween them. Having aiready . the utmose caution the pithecan.| ered several languages and a multh thropus descended the tree upon the | ‘Ud of dialects the ape-man opposite side from the great nocturn- that he could readily assimilate al prowter, and, closely followed by | ther, even tho this appeared Tarzan, moved silently away thru|°trely unrelated to the night across the plain. yyy: familiar, The ape-man was rather loath thus occupied were to relinquish an opportunity to in-| breakfast and the lesson spect a creature which he realized | "as aware of the beady was probably entirely different from |!®— down upon them anything in his past experience; yet|®0r was Tarzan cognizant he was wise enough to know when/| impending Ganger until the instant discretion was the better part of|that a huge, hairy body leaped full valor and now, as in the past, he/upon his companion from yielded to that law which dominates | branches above them, the kindred of the wild, preventing (Continaed on Monday) FREDERICK & NELSON'S ~ Garment Clearance Begins Tuesday Morning July 5th The mid-year clearance, at greatly reduced prices, of Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Ready-to-Wear Garments remaining from Spring displays in the Second Floor and Down- stairs Store Sections. The event provides many exceptional. op portunities to save in buying Ready-to-Wear Garments that meet FREDERICK & NEL- | SON'S exacting standards of style and quality, ago repast, and the other, leaping | y v9"