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The Seattle Star 3 merths, $1.50; @ months, $2.75 per month: ot Washington OF $9.00 per year 2 city *4, im Tobe tor fmonth of the ata eity Outta Ty. garrter ' Robert S.-Boyns, president of the revivified Chamber Fight on the head when, writing for The Star, he points Ourselves here in Seattle a great number of jobs for unemployed — by hy The Mtar year, te, B06 per month, Ode & month Published Dally Main” 0600, of Commerce, hits the nail out that we can create for the simple Process of using locally-manufactured _ in preference to those made elsewhere. Read his statement again: “It the buying public of Se attle will insist upon being sup- - plied with the manufactured "products of the Pacific Northwest whenever the quality and price ef those products are equal to that of products «manufactured _ elsewhere, this demand will ne- “@easitate increased production on the part of the manufacturers; ‘and increased production will re quire additional employes—thus ie te Right now—today—make _— men, of your needs, and a study of your purchases. b creating jobs whieh so earnestly appeal. “I The Star will encourage women of this community to im- mediately take a kitchen and household inventory of commodi- ties used to the exclusion of like articles of at least equal price and quality manufactured in Se. attle and the Pacific Northwest, you wilt be doing a service for the unemployed of our city. Like wise, you should urge business for yeu had for as favorable a price—then your duty lies pla men to buy stocks and supplies from our own factories, “i people could that in supporting home facturers they are proyidi capital with these m facturers “business and increase their payrolls and employ men and women, they would be more than willing throw the communfty's purchas ing power back of our own products.” realize manu the nu our which enlarge their to an inventory, Seattle housewives and Seattle business If you have been using goods made at a distance, when some Northwest product would serve equally well and can in. Give the home product the preference, and our unemployment problem will soon care for itself and vanish. a Some fast friends are too fast. The human race is won by a smile, Even cultivated girls sometimes grow wild. Complete footbal outfits include a few spareribs. ' Some of them who cun \ barely dai dance, dance barely. | ine! but Keep “1A Job for Up the Good Work |Your Boy let's keep it up. The po The hotjest job in America is | mining in the Comstock Lode, in Nevada. Miners there, 2,500 feet underground, work in » tem- perature of 145 degrees and have to be sprayed continually with cold water. Under your feet, the tempera- ture inereases an average of one degree for every 60 feet of depth. We live on the thin shell of an egg filled with liquid fire. Tap the interior and you'd have the power of s million volcanoes, Sir Charles Parsons, inventor of the marine turbine engine, says man eventually will harness the earth's interior heat and make it | do most of his work, Who will do it? Have you a | baby boy in the bassinet? Maybe jbe’s the one. , | Cutting a Mighty Tree Lambermen chop down one of the largest Douglas fir trees in British Columbia. Rings in the trunk show it took the tree 420 years to grow. It sprouted nine years after Columbus discovered America. Yet man cut it down and de- stroyed it in a few minutes. Honor and success are like that tree. It' doesn't take long to de stroy what required a long time te bulld up. Germany, the fallen world power, will agree. | The Hunter's “Mistake” | Blmer Yeoman of | “mistook” Kart Hebert Ridge, Or, for a deer, | dead, | Yeoman should be tried for | manslaughter, He didn't mean to j Kill Hebert, He ls, of course, | prostrated with grief because of the accident, f | Yeoman “mistook” Hebert for s deer, What Rind of a deer? Did he | think he was shooting at # buck? 1Or a doc? Or « fawnt | It is Inwful to shoot bucks in |season. It is unlawful to shoot | does or fawns at any Ume in Or- | egon. Yeoman saw “sa form shooting out from the brush.” What made | him think the “form” was « jbuck? Did he see any horns on the “form?” | Yeoman apparently was out to | shoot deer, any sex, any age. didn’t stop to look for horns. He | blazed away and killed a man, | In the commission of a crime, it mpy be contended, he accident- ally took human life, That's man- slaughter, Yeoman, then, should j be tried for manslaughter, Creswell of Oak Hebert fs There is no venom, no anger, | jim this proposal, It is made to | make bunting safe for other hunt | ers, Deershooting is one of the | popular sports offered by the | Northwest woods. But each sea json takes its tol) of lives. Each jseason =some = eager, =—reckless hunter “mistakes” a man for a | deer. | If every hunter made certain | that the deer had horns, there would be no accidents in the | woods. Scooped!—on | | } | jthe propriety of opening a subscrip: | by all who feel ao Inclined, could not THE SEATTLE STAR a Bellevue Club Sends Thanks Editor The Star: The members of the Bellevue District Development club wish me to thank you in behalf of the club for the fine work you are doing in exposing the crafty work of the county commis- sioners in the county ferry business. Mr, Chambers’ articles are very commendable and are full of facts. In our club house, just previous to the last elec- tion, Messrs. Ramsay and Dobson pledged the people of the district that if they were elected there would be no change in the then existing service. Since election they have kept us constantly in hot water as to whether we were to have any service at all. This, of course, has hurt the Bellevue district to a great extent and is very unjust. Pitiless publicity is what is needed and Chambers’ articles are doing the business. We thank you. BELLEVUE DISTRICT DEVELOPMENT CLUB. Per W. E. LeHuquet, Secretary. A Letter From Avridge Mann Editor The Star: And then, | like the pletures, too: Dear Sir: I seldom read the news, | the skies are always clear and blue, and heavy stuff would give me) the ladies allrare lovely queens, the blues, and fiction makes me go to! gents have creasen in thelr Jeans; sleep, particularly if it's deep, end) they pick you wp and take you far pottey is just as bad—but what I/ from all the things that really are like ta @ lively “ad.” For instance, there's the little akit| I read them everywhere they are.) that Chesterfield has called “A Hit,” I even read them in The Star, or on| A youth beneath a bareball hat is» the billboards built spots to pay | holding high a glowny bat, and there the tax on vacant lols, because for! he st pictures, plot and style, the ads have! grinning like a lovesick pup. fiction beat a mile. | Now if he'd made a hit, he'd race It's no refreshing to the eye to eee to beat the blooming ball to base, the things you'd like to buy if you/and ft ia time he dropped his a should ever get nome dqugh above and got to first in nothing Mat; but | the quantity you owe; but advertise | if he's Pooted to the spot, they ought ments all are free, and so they make a bit with me, to call the ad “A Swat.” AVRIL MANN. Heart Goes Out to Gardner F. amily Editor The Star [many more like me, who my, like Having seen the picture of Mrs.| to help some deserving mothers that Dolly Gardner and her dear, iino-| are left alone with their little inno.| cent little four-yearold baby girl centa. And in thin enee, it would Joan, in a recent issue of your up-to | have a moral tendency to uplift and date paper, and also read Roy Gard:| mould their ideals towards thel ner’s letter in @ later issue, I eannot true and beautiful by showing @ but feel inclined to suggest to you little fellow-fecling under the pres ent untoward efreumstancer The father is a felon, an outlaw hunted like a wild beast,and will be shot on sight no matter about hia indomitable will and nerve. So let us make the poor mbther feel that she i not included in this same tion Hist for the benefit of that nervestrained mother and the Mino cont little fouryearold girl. They must have some support or “go to the dogs.” tf left altogether unat- tended. And a little purse made up category pect that she will impart the love of doing right and holding to the true and beautiful in the mind of her baby girl? If society them, they must in return respect society, and ite organized laws. Ignorance and selfishness, the cause of dll the poverty and destitu tion of earth, shall I fear, play sad havoc with many of the present in stitutions of man. in anyway be construed as coming thra sympathy towards the father. or any of his overt acta. At the same time there ts not a man, woman or child who does not admire the nerve of such an indom itable wit! and energy aa evinced by the man himself; even ali officers of the law, have #0 expressed then selves by saying, “what couldn't he have accomplivhed if he had only been rightly directed?” j I have no wife or little children— | “Words are thing f ink, n@ @ emall drop ° never except | to have, and there are Falling like gems upon @ thought, in, With head turned up, and) and isn’t it natural to ex-! respects | produces That which makes thousanda, hape millions think.” and sure to’ dispel the dark clouds} |of prejudice that mont nef egwed| settles over all Innocent ones in any ways connected with the guilty Respectfully, J. C. BROWNE. Port Ludiow, Wash. per- A teow words in your paper may materiniize into much good cheer for | mother and baby girl in this -case, Wants Disarmament Demonstration Editor The Star most important jzonn today is t a Former President it ,wate rented a democracy err tar when he undertook to com mit the country to approval of the league of nations, but he was un deceived and overwhel in the election It is mfe to presume that the peo. ple were opposed to mixing in Bu ropean affaite and to any surrender of our sovercighty—but it not safe to presume that they were not at the same time unequivocally in favor of world peace It is to be noted that there ts now no time for a plebescite—no time or oocasion for an election—but there are sixty days for a demonstration | "fee wide. wident ahd con that the e the ated b. the attention of the grens, two of w utr not in lan immigration or t we will not enter. of quarreling about is a likelihood for cable} consideration Are we or are are ad te for doe democracy? os multiplic 1 com attention color line tain the Yap as long of getting a 9% privileges: Wilson thought to presume that he repre and could not to Th idea an there car lease well understood that the | > be on the table faces | language of that fine diplomacy openly That i» the only way in which Americans can begin to com pete with Muropeans and thelr age old adeptnens in the field of interna-| tional negotiations eh one great organization, “all waddied, all bridied, all fit for the fight’—the church, “While the burden is not peculiarly its own, it} iy a very appropriate subject for the pulpit and the press of the church | - as well. L. A. VINCENT. Flood of Letters on Scriptures | Daitor The Star them answered my questions 80 many pervonal letters came in| part,.the 7th Church in Isr to my letter to The Star of | 70: 9th ave. N. W., which meets! 9 that I take this means of | 09 Sundays at 2 p. m., was the only one to ull my questions and| the Scriptures. will answer all my | Bible and prove} 1 will gladly tell} American arrived at is There are a few things that ought to be very distinctly forced upon the reply | Sept. answering them. 1 wish to thank all the writers for | their desire of helpfulness and of fers to cail and discuss the Scrip | their anewern by it, | tures, | the public about it | However, there were too many in-| Many people sald just repent and) | vitations, and inorder not to be par:|#eek Christ. Others suid read the! tial, I will answer none of them per | Bible for yourself | eonally |" Well, can a man repent of sin if he} I got letters from Yakima, Bel-| does not know what sin is? Can one| lUngbham, t Stanwood, the county | find anything from ghe Bible if he/| | jail, from atheists, doctors and many | hasn't got the gift bf understand. | | different creeds. | ing? There are few creeds or religions| ‘That's why I asked those ques-| |that I have not given some consid-| tions. I wanted to see if some church | eration to In the past, and I will say | could actually prove their doctrine | that they all have some truth, but I} by the Bibie. | wanted the truth fn ite fullness. And) ‘They did! to get the truth tn its fullnens, 1 be Vive el one would have to take the; Bible from Genesis on, and prove! one verwe by the other, and thus put/ to silence all opposition of atheists, ncientixts and philosophers, falsely |letter, in spite of our advance) no-called. (Tim, 6-20), | warning that we would not ha To be fair to the public and to my | apace to print them, Some of these correspondents, I will say, that out/have been forwarded to Mr. Stru-/ of the scores of religions, creeds and|vens. Others we shall reluctantly | cults I have studied, altho many ot leona to the wastebasket.—Eaditor, | Opposes Maternity Legislation Editor The Star ‘That the bill ls an “effort” on the |} In your paper of Sept. 7 is an edl-| part of these women indorsers to torial in favor of the Shepherd (or | save the lives of mothers dnd babies | ‘ Smith-Towner) bill, to which I take/{s conceded, but this “effort” should! inwue. hot be at public expense, since re-| You say that “millions of American eulte so frequently fall short of ex- | women who indorse this bill will be| pectations, and the country is hard- betrayed” if it fala to pass. How/|ly committed to become an =| about other millions of women being/| ment station In dealing with human betrayed if it becomes law? life. answer prove them by If anyone else questions by the Reepectully, D. J. STRUVE ‘The Star, too, has been flooded with letters on the Scriptural sub | jects brought up in Mr. Struvens’ Again, 25,000 deaths of women, every are | the deaths of the other half? | you state that halt y | ering : | 250,000 babies have died on aceount lof the delay in are making an a prove proot then That other nothing in its sider that up to date, with all its faulte, on earth But the worst is yet to com iwi and ra tors as in It does not silence the testimony jaf our court records and the press, Ime agine doctors can do with a law Uke ti |to protect them. time these doctors could have al expense “Washington representatives, notice 602 26th Ave hi. ns eS i AP you may that one-half of due to lack of care; whet cm “in the two and @ on has been conmde 000 women and rs cor this bill parsing this bill,” yom ertion you cannot an assertion impossible of, If this bill becomes @ every doctor should be nally responsible for every failed to clear. 1 similar law exists in mont. countries the world” fs favor when we Om cour in this admit that there are char cals in the ranks of the all professions. To the harm that unscrupulous: What a high of the taxpayers! "4 'B. Cg, Laying the Cornerstone of Your Home The real cornerstone of your home is the eafe and sure title to the land on which will build, Without a title you will have neither nor home. furnished by a Title In Policy issued by this pany. You should insist the™keller furnish you wil Title Insurance Policy you buy. GOING TO BE COAL: SCARCE. a Revolution NEEDLESS SICKNESS ¥ DE. WILLIAM E BARTON | know that multitudes of people who HERE is an enor-| mope and drag thru life might pick mous loss to the| up their feet and march to music if community on) they had that music in their minds | Account of sick-| and resolution fn their wills. ness. Some of; Courage and hope are health pro- that @ickness is | Aucers. Love and joy are worth tons inevitable. Some{of medicine. Grief and fear destroy of it is incura-| what we have learned to cali morale. ble. All of us| Try it at the next meal you ent. who do not | Keep up a cheerful conversation, Be | die violent genuinely interested in those who sit deaths will some | with you. Do not talk shop. Be time be incur-| companionable, You will rise from ably sick, | your dinner with good digestion. But’s vast amount of sickness! Then fast once try being slum or| angry. Yo not try it more than Which men and women suffer is onee. I hay¢ been told, and 1 am in- | The more wh know about | clined to believe St, that anger or| structure of the human body, fear produces in the gastric juice a More do we realize that nature poison which is chemically akin.to “get od side of health. She loads the venom of snakes. | heavily in favor of normal-| Every unrighteous emotion or pur. | But we give her a hard run for | pose is bad for the heal Every Money, and sometimes we leave courageous act oF herdic jesolution pt. | is good for the health, ‘There is I am not a physician, netther am/ therapeutic value in a smile, There | anadvocate of any of the popular is power in the affirmative will. You oe = me mental healing, But I) can be as ws well-a as you teel, | \ | | | ou | nb | THE ARROW AND THE SONG | BY HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW | I shot an arrow into the air, | It fell to earth, I know not where; | For, so #iftly it flew, the sight | Could not follow in its flight, I breathed a song into the alr, It fell to earth, | know not where; For who has sight #0 keen and strong That it can follow the flight of song? Long, long afterward, in an oak I found the arrow, still unbroke; And the song, from beginning to end, I found again in the heart of a friend. Try This on Your Wise Friend A company of soldiers wanted to cross a river. The only means was by a boat in which were two children. The boat would hold only one soldier at a time, or the two children. How did the soldiers cross? Answer to Saturday's: 2 gallons of wine. A news event of some import- ance has been ovef@oked by the newspapers. It is nothing less im- portant than revolution, And this revolution is in no less im portant country than England. Democracy bas been overthrown and the British Isles are now \ruled by a dictator, His name ip Lioyd George. He is no relation to | King George, who for a long time has failed to count. The Atlantic Monthly, of Bos ton, is to be congratulated on hay- ing the story, In the August number A. Gardiner contrib- utes the article “The Twilight of Parliament.” This all may sound like an at jtempt at the jocose, but anyone who wishes to see whether it is a joke or serious will do well to read the Atlantic Monthly arti- | cle, He will find that in sober se rionsness parliament has passed out and that the government now ruling England ts literally « dicta torship. He will learn also how the press of the British empire | Was corrupted by cheap gifts of titles ahd how job-holding and manipulation of patronage com- pleted the Lioyd George setrure of power, He will learn to his amazement that the house of lords, supposed to be the Tory stronghold, is now the only hope, the only vestige of protection for the traditional British liberty, We_dye your rags and old carpets and weave them into handsome rugs, The Fuzzy Wuzzy Rug Co. Phone Capitol 1233 Albert Hansen Jeweler and Silversmith NOW LOCATED 1518 Second Ave. We have repeatedly warned the Seattle public that the coal supply for their domestig use would be inadequate for the coming winter. This statement is “repeated for the public good. We have held a leading position as Seattle Fuel Dealers for nearly twenty years and our advice is based on our experience and knowl- edge. Majority of consumers with storage facilities have not laid in their winter supply. They should do so at the Present Reduced Price. Nanaimo-Wellington Coal - Is Superior for Domestic Use Our Supply Is Being Curtailed Because of Increasing Demand Here Elsewhere. We Therefore Again Urge You to BUY YOUR COAL NOW BUY IT THROUGH YOUR REGULAR DEALER OR FROM IMIONKS & MILLER, INC. Dealers Also in Bellingham, Roslyn and Other Washington Coals . Eighth and Madison Elliott 1007 Second and Connecticut 904 Elliott 0709 estlake Garfield 5027