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Coes any LEARN A WORD The Seattle Sta Py mal, owt of cfty, B00 per month: # mentha F160; & mentha FRE: yonn, $6.08, im the at Newepaper En. terprive Asem and United Pres Services It's pronounced accent on the first ‘ It me fight, seoking It warlike It's used ean defer ot to be bellicone.” ne us, inclined fight, quarre comes from %, ESABEL BEGIN HERE TODAY FAY TUDOR, wealthy orphan, returns from reconstruction work in Franee to recover from a nervous breakdown, the remult of overwork and the news of the death of her brother, Wilbur. At her summer home tm Bandy Cove sbe is met by her aunt, an attractive widow, § MRS, OLAKA TUDO. ind the latter's daughter, 7 o| LAUREL, Way learns that tn the summer colony are her rejected ruiter, which predicts such | /ARRY CADMUS, and her aunt's suitor, the wealthy philanthropist, event There was « tme, an | KENNETH CLAYTON. Alone in the drawing room on the night of ber | clently, when God favored the Jews | return, Pay ts startled by the rudden appearance at the window of @ | ae @ nation; but the langauge of the rhastly, pale face with staring «yen It vaniabes and Fay fears that | New Testament mai i very clear ber wur-shecked nerves have tricked her. | that today, blood descent from the GO ON WITH THE STORY Hike thi» your opponent you it's best “MAKING LITTLE CLOTHES” | [renee o¢ peu ion wt we BY RUTH HARWOOD | The return of the Jews to Palen | From “Working-Hour Songs” in Poetry Magazine for March tne in fuifiliment of Seripture| Gray rain on the window-pane, And in my heart gray rain- And the ceaseless whir of machines Pounding my weary brain. beeaune He had euch a little share of life, ent chosen peop impor See the fine big house. The house is built of stone. ‘The house stands on a hill. From the windows of the house you can ste the Golden late, and the army prisoners on Alcatraz Island. The house is in San Francisco. There are not little houses around it, only big 7 “ " Inside the house are softest rugs from Persia. On the walls are rich pictures i by artists. Costly tapestries are there. The chairs and tables are made of hi hardwood. There are many rooms. Upstairs are bedrooms. The beds are covered with lots of nice warm blankets and are white linen sheets, and soft pillows. "In the pantry there are many good things to eat. There is coal in the basement. The people who live in the house have servants to wait on them and to keep the house ¥ and cook the good things to eat. Nobody in this house is cold or hungry. ' Who lives in the fine house? Why, Jafet Lindeberg lives in the house. Who is Jafet Lindeberg? Is Jafet Lindeberg a burglar or a bad holdup man? No, he is not a burglar or a holdup man. If he was a burglar or a man, he would be in the jail and could not see the Golden Gate as the sun shines tm the evenings And he net be nice and warm snd Maybe the woman who married eight men was im 2 nico warm bet and = trying to find a good one. Congress is hoping it will all come out in the hitewash. ee ee er er oe caaiee hin Aang Ti gf irl i vi hy i One of the blackest pages im his- tory was written by Japan respect- img Korea, Chosen (Korea) was on dafet hasn't too many rich friends who own too many politicians, And some day the people who pot their money fn the banks that Jafet ruled will get some more money, or something. But eae war im 1895 the Japanese felt i was necessary for them to pene- trate China thru Korea, Japan dis- tinetly agreed om her honor that as soon Gs the war was over she ould withdraw, but with damna- le treachery, with unapoakabic iuplicity, within @ few rears there- after she seleed Korea and holds i and ts £0000000 people. Kha ‘pat wpon her treaties, conntued at the murder of the Korean queen, and now expects us to take her word and believes her promises. Senator Ashurst (DJ, Arts. lipseecsneeneeonel y Whose mocketh the poor re proacheth his Maker: and he thet is glad at calamities shall net go unpunished —lroverbs au ch eee Leave the poor e Some time for selftmprovement. Let them not Be forced to grtnd the bones out of their arms For bread, but heve some space te think and feel like mortal and tmmortal cree turce ——Phatp James Batley. Charlie Sobb’s 36 Children Chartio Sobb, of Birmingham, Alabama, is the proud father of 26 children. Chartio ts GL Twelve of his children are by bis third wife The telegraph wires do not say whether he ts rich or poor, But it is a safe bet that Charlie, as contemplates his family, wouldn't change with Jobn D, Rockefeller, Iren are the greatest wealth. If all people kept up to Chartie Sobb's record, about 24,000,000 babies would be born In America this year. 10 years, feeding the population would be an im- possible problem. The system called § ctvilization Our Booklet R-4 tells other interesting things 54 is the enemy of large families, about Concrete Streets. Write for your copy. f od ; Tf actentista con hear anti foot- teps Uke thunder they ought te PORTLAND Cnaants ASSOCIATION invent them some rubber hela juilding , — SEATTLE, WASH. Pity the poor moth, Just when ~ smd we are getting out of our winter cA National Organization to Improve and Galas ke is geting inte thom Extend the Uses of Concrete Offices in 23 Other Cities A Street Has a Hard Job Now Carrying the light, horse-drawn traffic of a few years ago was one thing. Carrying the swiftly moving automobiles and pounding motor trucks of today is quite another. How much of the trouble with street pavement in your town comes from not recognizing the difference? ; Just as faster and heavier railway tra! compelled heavy, modern rails and roadbed, so the heavy pounding traffic of today calls for rigid Concrete Streets. Experience shows that Concrete pave- ment can be built to stand any kind of traffic, indefinitely, practically without repairs. Easy riding, skid-proof, hole-proof, per- manent—that is Concrete. he enormous places chi Hays ts out—gone to the movies. Work has his job, Where there was a Wl there's a Work. Bome singers get $1,000 a night, | but look at the risk they run, Yet I go numbi Just the size of And in my heart gr And the endles: Beating a dull refre LETTERS: Ettitor The Star: T am at a lone to aceount for the story published by your correspond. jemt under date of March 4, stating jthat the C.. M. 4 St. P. Railway had |shown 4 lack of enterprise in ling freight at this station: alxo that jthey had apparently been charging switohing I have been agent at Cedar Falls | And now he’s gone, And all my heart went with him, ly on, Making [ttle clothes him, Little clothes for others But nevermore for him. Gray rain on the window-pane, ay rain-— 8 grind of machines ain, * EDITOR Denies Criticism Is Just not yet collectsd a dollar in ewitoh ing from anybody. Neither has there been any complaint about the deliv. ery of freight, because we not only have @ freight depot but a high plat form upon which to unload heavy ticles, Yours truly, WwW. M. KELA&O, Cedar Palla, Wash, Why Close This Road? Editor The Star: | As you are always ready to take up the cudgel in favor of right, with | a big “TK.” and the cause of Ke pro plo, we over on the east aide of Lake | | Washington would like to ask why the county commissioners are going | |to close about two miles of the old asphalt road, and pave it and make every one croms the ferry at Kirk land? The new road ts all graded and ready to pave |pave that and let the poor tax-ridden |publie use the old rand? It is a good road and could be used for years for | Jeared and Why not ordinary travel, and there tr bet one place where it touches the new grade. Those county commissioners seem | to be In some kind of a dicker with Anderson, and It would be interest ing to know just why they are plan ning to throw all the Bothell travel across the lake, instead of paving the new grade. I wonder if you could get ao litte light on the deal. There would have be about 150 feet planked around where the two roads towoh. Thanking you for your stand on all the people's interests, I am, 8 omit, A TAXPATER Kirkiand, Wash. He Was Some Mother’s Boy DEiMor The Star: | In seeing the picture and reading | the editorial about Harvey Chureh, It stirred the mother nature ta me | We the mothers of America, the land of the brave and the free, of ed weation and Libles, such as ne other aries by Uhousands to teach the heathens, should we not first ctvilixe Jour home land? Iw the man-eating jaan in the glen rance worme than we with our fiber and etucation—with the “Dallot™ in our hands for lawmaking, that our boys can be hanged for crime? able effort should be made to stop all criminals in their carver. Killing bo man beings after they have beoome criminals never will stop ertme. Fut we should begin way back nine montha before the babe is born. Poor Harvey was some mother’s baby, tn jall events not born and started right The best thing Abe Lincotn sald waa, | "Give the boy a chance” That boy may never have bad a chance. Tut his persecutora have had thetr |ehanes. They have been reared and educated, honored and loved, gainea also fame, wtanding among the beet men of the land, were placed in thetr hirh pouitions, wel fed, clothed and weil kept, well paid with the taxnay- ere’ money and votes, and lieensed, an it were, by the taxpayers and peo- ple to take life for life God created men equal. “In Mia jown image created He him.” Haven't |we marred that imace? He made Man stronger, physically, mentally, |morally, for the purpose of protect ing hin weaker sister or wife, who! at the present day have te carry burdens and responafbi!ties on funtly placed upen them, making them more unfit for motherhood Yeu we need law; we need penal institutions; the criminal deserves a punishment Wi! God put amy lighter punishment “Thow shalt not kill" does not say “uniens the w of man says so." | believe Harvey Chureh died Innocent as the day he was born; that God had given him hie sin, for He only dn us reeponsible for the talents He tntrusted to ua Parents and homes are the first to Not that I don't believe every pee tame, then school and church, buat. | neue and the general public. Is it any wonder the young wife refuses to raise children? That race suicide te practiond more in our own Chris tian nation than any nation tn the world? There are hidden crimes that will have to be answered for at the great white bar of Justicg, where only God can judge. I ha lways maid, and now my asa me rT of both bey and girl, that if our boys were property trained our penal inatitutions would be empty Let un think of the boys as our boys, not that poor mother’s boy. In the great work! war we were proud of our boys, They fought our Might Now, can't we ficht theire? Make for them the best posnfbhle laws; throw out all the best infiv ence; give them every possible oppor. | tunity for the good. The “ballot” box is our onty weap on, We have to stop crime, no let us take sure alm*and shoot #traight JUST A MOTHER. Will Jews Return to Palestine? EAftor The Star: The widely prevalent idea of a new Jewish Zion in Palextine is founded upon ignorance, ignorance of the |Seriptures and of the conditions which would be neormtary to the re | alization of such a project. (he iden ta, naturally, one that) appeals wtrongty to the Jown, eape| |elaily tn lands where they are sub-| |Jrcted to persecution and foresd to live under conditions of hardship and tnjusticn.. It holds out to them | thought. the hope of realizing the agelong aspiration of this scattered and un fort te people, and they grasp at it as a drowning man grasps at a straw. With them it is simply a case of the wish being father to the Under the impulse of their spiritual and political longings ‘and aspirations, they eaatly misconstrue the prophecies of the Old Testament Scriptures which either had thetr fulfillment tn the ancient Jewish kingdom or have reference to the A Letter from AIVRIDGE MANN. Dear Avridge Mann: I notice In a letter by Mra. Sweetman that she objects to Dan Landon betng mayor becanse he ty vestiess and wifeless, and this suggests the following letter. B. W. FL, Bellingham. To Mr, Dan Landon: Som Indy writer suffraget, vell, anyway, she unless bh 1” swear, for all hia life, h I tink man hardly looking best for har up in the lumber-wood it b hats and shirts. med pants and snus, ban needed for en man to ¢ Med license only four and half, ve all os throwing brick man ink her mame vas Mra. Sweat— kot no right in politick, © skall support a vest and vife. ven he skall wearing only vest; . pan most alvays understood, that hoes, and sometime Copenhagen © in politick or picture show. having better half for four and half, you bet my life, ban pretty cheap to get a vite and pretty soon you going sen, I fo, sport—now you sknll buy en vest Dan-— I call you Dan for short get vun better half for me. you ban gude feller, Joly and vife, and they skall lecting you for life; and I shall be your better man, #0 soon I hear from Orphant Ann. ~- Dear Lamber-jacker: LUMBERJACK ER. Don’t set your heart on Orphant Ann—perhaps she's set her cap for Dan; she hasn’t written me as yet, but there are others you can get, and I've another dame or two. for you-I'll tell you in a day | tance in the sight of God. La Christ |All distinction between Jew and Ger Ule is broken down. See Gal, 1i.28-29. The only Jews with whom God reek ons today a spiritually, “If ye be Chrim are ye Abraham's seed.” There we read that “Be i who is one outwardly * & Jew who is one inwardly,” Jew which is one only by, blood de |moent is, therefore, not a Jew at all in the sight of God: and any “return of the Jews” which God is concerned with will have nothing to do with the Jews by natural birth not a Jew except Christ become Abruham’s spiritual need. Since the Christian dispense | Gon began, God's purposes and prov idences have been for spiritual | Iarwel, and have no reference to the natural Je auch, The Jews are not returning to Pal | eatine to any noteworthy extent. The jfor the past seven years and have |Jow ts by nature « trader, and con Eregutos in the large centers of pop vintion The great majority Jews, even were there room for |them in Palestine, would never be conten: ry h po large the high and Jewinh ntal comparatively in @ « cities ways of while the idea of a restored state appeals to them on » grounds. only « fe and ated international c om ameres. are ready to sacrifice tangible oppor: | tight of something very like relief tunities of gain for sentimental rea. fons. During the last 20 years, in reaponse to all the efforts that have been made to promote the Zionist Project, involving millions of dollars jexpenditure, only a few thousands have gone to Palestine from various while during the same period ne of Jews have migrated to Ameria. ‘The real “return of the Jews" w be the great math itual seed of Abrah coming of Christ. Mut this delusion of a coming reetoration of a phy foal, earthy kingiom of Israel acts 2 @ blind upen the spiritual eve fight of people who should be noting the slene of the nearness of Christ's return. It te a scheme of Satan to fet people watching for something which will never happen. so that thetr attention may be diverted from magters which should deenty concern them fust at this time. People ought to devote more time te the reading and study of the Seripturen That tx ring of the spir the mecond land has; we, sending out misioo|on the second killer than the first?|(P* OM erent WILEY B. RANDOLPT!, Omak, V Walter Meier’s Sign Water The Star: There's no mw against stringing aévertising signs across our city streets ‘There's often a very rood reason for doing eo, as when a man te run- ning for offie who ls not well or favorably known. | Pat we look with fevepicton upen a man who ts «© discourteous an to string wuch a sign acrom a street In a way that it completely shuts off j the buwinees signe below it. Across Columbia st. the atgn: “MEIER FOR MAYOR,” ts stretched tn such a way that ft obliterates |"MANCA’S” and “DR KE. J. BROWN,” and the names of other | business firma. Incidentally, Dr. B J. Brown t a candidate for mayor. Does Mr. Meter fear him? In life's Nettle games, all players moet play fair or quit--even those who play for the mayor's chalr. Dr. Brown ts entitled to the bene fit of the traffic on Second ave. He han paid for his sign—tit ts his place of business—he is a long resident language of om, 11:28 on this point. | The | such of these as have by accepting | of the! They might, even think that her brain was affected by the borrors thru which she had passed! After breakfast she wandered off alone down the winding side path which ied to the shore, Way A masculine veoloe sound ed clone to her. She started violent ly, ber wunetrung nerves jJangling again. A dapper young man in im maculate flannels with « bit of | blend mustache above his weak mouth, #tood beside her. “Awfully |sorry I e#tartied you. Laurel told me you were home, and I thought |i might find you out here. I remex it was « favorite spot of bered yours 1 find I bave forgetten most things phat were habits before | went away,” Fay retorted ooolly. ‘I suppose 1 was one of the hab ite which you have forgotten, too, Pay.” | “You were,” she returned frankly }~Cntil Laurel told me you were at the club, I had forgotten that you were even alive” Cadmus winced but persisted. | “You are quite wure? There t | not a live epark left among the | ashee™® “There aren't even ashes! Pay picked up a few grains of mn4 and them lightly from ber paim. They are gone like—that” | but « blew He sighed sentimentally, | climmered in his pale eyes. There was @ hint of amusement in her face. “Cheer up, | That's the shertff, im't it? the young man with him?” | She nodded down where « tall, thin man with @ gris xied mustache was talking ounger, boyish-tooking stranger. A golice official Trom the dity Larry or Barry or some Harry Cadmus responded. He came up to the club yesterday to make some inquiries.” “Inquiries? Fay repeated. “About what?t Who & famed they took to be a wid man." mus laughed. “They'd heard talk, I supposes, because some seat cushions | and a eteamer rug were st | Pearwall's launch. Old Hulse | bad anything to interest line Patterson the thought resolutely from her. As the two moved off, her eyes | followed them idjy. | “De you know, there uned te be tiny cave somewhere about here,” she remarked to her oompanion. “We played all sorts of games of pirates and buried treasures there when we were children. No strang- ler could find ft In a hundred years, but ft would be a splendid place for any one to hide out tn.” They walked back to meet Laurel playing with her collie on the lawn. She raised her eyebrows at their Approach. “Mother has been look- ing everywhere for you, Pay,” she announced loftily, “She could not imagine where you had gone, but T mi¢ht have gueseed; you always were fond of the bay. She seemed deliberately te tgnore Cadmus’ presence, and Fay gazed at her tn astonishment, What could be the matter? She knew her mer- and a heavy taxpayer. Whether Mr. Meier or the Union league paid for his sien, we care not—IT SHOULD COME DOWN. 1 suggest that Walter Meier qual- ity first as a gentleman, before as- pirtng to the mayor's chair. ! MAUDE SWEETMAN. Marry. This ts too |nice & morning for post mortems! ourtal cousin's moods wen enough @ recall that this assumption of cold rarcasm always indicated an ar fury rging beneath Laurel's t per was uncertain at beet; what could have awakened it now? With a word of apology Puy left them, but at the steps of the porch she glanced back. leurd and Harry Cadmus were standing as the had left them, evidently in animated debate. Mra. Todor announced Gat her attorneys had come, and the rest of the morning was spent in a maze of legal and financial detail Fay was astonished to learn the extent ef her own wealth, She had inherited her brother's share of the family extate, and that amounted to a sum which staggered and depremed her, When the waitress brought up her luncheon Fay noticed that the gis was emiling. “What is it, Louise! abe asked “Oh, Mins Tudor™ ‘The git @impiet. “Frank was teasing the cook this morning because she de + clared that there were ghosts or witches about, and now he's found } that his best sult is gone from his | rooms over the garage and she has the laugh op himf* hts fome time last night, and there's trace of bow the thief got tn the beach to/ other food was all m | but everything was locked up just to @]ae she bed lett it” Bo that face which she had seen |could net have been a Ogment of her sick brain. That etrained, white face with the | nothing about this | I've been very il and smallest and least pretentions of the colony, but invitations to her small “affaires” were eagerly sought after. “ey bad gone to a guest on an upper story, but the reached her even there, and laughter and hum ef voices and | whirring of arriving motors made her treacherous nerves quiver. After a hopeless effort she threw her book aside. If ehe could onl escape from the house te a secl | WARNING! Colds Toothache Neuralgia Lumbago Always say “‘Bayer’’? when you buy Aspirin. | Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Headache Neuritis Rheumatism Pain! Pain Accept only ‘“Bayer”’ package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablete—Also bottles of 24 and 100—All Druggists, Aspirin is the trade mark of Hayer Mamutactare of Moncaceticacidentor of Selicylicecté