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===] The Seattl and United Press Servion out of city, E80 per month: # mor » 6-—Photograph by Henry Clay—Poem by Leo. H. Lassen the entrance of the Cornish School at Harvard Ave. and Roy St. Gin, Gasoline and Probably Girls The man who fills his head with hooch and his tank with ¢ is ASSEMBLING THE MAKINGS OF A MURDERER. The ordinary speeder is bad enough, but the booze-dulled driver who runs amuck on the highways of city or country is a public menace. HOOCH AND HOMICIDE ARE TWIN BROTHERS, - we @19 ASM HUTCHINGON ve MAT BADICE te introduced to ¢ ho went to school with tim 1 At this time—t9g pline at the same time HAPOOOD, &@ garrulous Londor and who has just renewed bis acqual Habre iv 34 and is living with bis wife . : ; ‘ ’ t MAL. RE, Penny Green, an age neve Why don’t our authorities make the combination of drinking and driving UNPOPU- By ormbone seam ot wy iy , i‘ rules in LAR? Let’s stop FINING drunks who slay or maim. Every few days we have a eevee Henin one oe fc ing “improved by case of some moonshine-muddled automobilist who has killed or crippled one of his wuited to cach other after visiting them 10 r home, H “xplains Bain, companions or has smashed into an innocent pedestrian or another car, What punish- other fellow's point: whereas Mo preity wife is & tyelcal aaa aoe | opinionated gonstp. ment does he get? Merely the giving up of a few dollars. If these hooch-hounds were made to understand that any time they are caught mix- ing gasoline and booze they would be SENT TO JAIL they would be more careful about handling a steering wheel and a bottle together. An Eastern judge sentenced young Dodge, a millionaire, to the WORKHOUSE for speeding on a joy-ride. Let's have something like that in Seattle. When a DRUNKEN man is found driving an automobile, whether he has hurt anybody or not, SOAK HIM WITH A JAIL Their temperamental difference was first brought out when they fing went to their home, immediately after their 1 ‘ fabel insted og calling Mark’s room his “den,” a word whi atter particularly dot while Mark aroused Mabel because he immediately nicknamed thelr serys ants, the Jinks sisters, “High” and “Low Jinks” Mark thought it over however, the night after, and characteristically decided hin wife coulda’t be biamed for their apparently trivial, but irksome, differences. i | ‘This difference of viewpoint, however, butlds up something tke @ tong | of sympathy between Mark and “High” and “Low.” They don't understang jhim any more than does his wife—but they like his whimetcal ways ang they form innocent little “plots” to further what Mabel calls his “doing, ; | Mark has an interest in the firm of Fortune, East and Sabre, historic deal ere in church and school supplies. His grandfather had been tricked SENTENCE. | foraing over Da partnership to be: * ye * * * Ye * * * REV. BEBABTIAN FORTUNE, and wince that time the Sabres have hag n ice in the conduct of the firm. Mark, who is in charge of the H Diary of a joyrider—Midnight: Moonshine and speed. Dawn: Jail and the morgue. | Nehlag department, has been promised Satnds tattaorcctps ae fi ers i: : Ss Baa! TWYNING ts in & similar position, « charge of the workshops with. | ae ne on ¢ ‘, a “ my out being @ partner. Mark Sn parti ly interested in a new text i Britain Pays They say Rockefeller is rich because he never [rt oe Ue pripaiid=?Englaad,” a Maléty writen elake'a nor at revolutionary line. Mabel utterly falls to see it ax anythin | rtope mentioning tt to her. Starving f other friends for friendship, Hin friend Her Debts loses his temper. John is rich because he never Sir Robers ttorne, chancetlor ot loses anything. the exchequer, announces Great i ng but a “lesson book,” and Mark sympathy at home, he turns tp Britain will resume paying inter. Delaware town has a female fire company. Bet | MR. FAROUS, @ peculiar oid fellow, much hen-pecked by his spinster ot en ber war debts to America they want silk hose. rte PERCHES, consisting of young Peveh, whom Mark calls “Toung | text eutumn. Ne conditions about De eae ae Rod, Pole or Perch,” and his mother, a strong-minded woman much wrppeg _ the method of payment will be Some homes have so much jazz the baby cries up in her son. aN ote . Vhile « 0 idborou Mark ences te made, The interes charse ap like a saxophone. Jona FYBAR, bio childuecd ewoctheart, who la ridiig wits heriadall proximates quarter SPRL “CHAR na ° aoe ton and debonair husband, Hon dollars annually, This huge The differences that arise in most families are LORD TYBAR. Altho the couple present a carefree exterior, Mark senme sum Great Britain will find, in indif ferences nomething of a mental conflict between them, and, while he does. BOL cate times as difficult as these, to ae sciously realize it, some of hin old ardor for Nona reappears. maintain ber financial honor and wat Bake, spare smraaaetes P After his talk with Nona, Mark proceeds on to the office and i muck rturbed to learn t Twyning has been promised the partnership that! i he was supposed to get. After a disagreeable scene with Fortune hell banking nation above default. | decides to tuke a holiday and starts back home to spend the day with The British are able to shoulder Mabel. q so serious an addition to their | As Mark reaches home the postman hands bim a letter from Nona, ev Gently written before he met her, announcing her return and asking him || war ee re agey they — = _ Eee to call. Entering his home he is disappointed to find that Mabel, insted alone among people of Europe A W rd F of being giad for a day with him, ts rather annoyed. Her annoyance, be Jevied adequate dowmestie taxation ord From a Tobacco User Smiths tee to Seatniay weowens of the Dots upon themselves during and since | Multor The Star Jingx of the Veterans of Foreign pam Sages. pose a bo gi a mang air ¢ vereen, SO the war. An Englishman having Am a steady reader of The Star| Wars or the Disabled American Vet the rector of the Penny Green church, and whom Mark particularly die . of $5,000 and would like to answer an art erans of the World War, he will see likes, comes to luncheon. As usual, an incipient quarrel bursis out between, mm anneal income of 85000 pays | written by H. Ienac, in the iswue of| that 96 to 86 per cent of the mas Marks and Bagshaw, j an income tax of about $1,000. In | March 31. Howtates he has had both | amoke and stand for their rights on Now go on with the story. the United States, = similar in- | schoo! and war experience, and states the tobacco question. His war expe Vil —— them when they talk. They | ome le taxed Little more than | that he has talked to thousands of | rience probably was with the favorea Sabre's thought was—and ft re-| sy things I've got ideas about bat $100, in enece ten. joverseas men, and that they im) Y¥. MC. A, and I'd be glad to have! [mained with him thruout the meal ever can explain my ideas to % many |formed him that the tobacco habit Mr. sane attend the dimbled men's | jacutely illustrated by the impressive |them. I never can argue In Franee, as also in Germany, | was 4 dirty habit, a useless habit and meeting Wednesday evening, at the monologues which Mr, Boor Bag | with them. | They've all got egmvie { and among the other belligerents, and an expensive habit. Roosevelt hall, \ehaw addressed to Mabel, and by her | —_ and I believe I haven't any con war taxation was lightly imposed. 4. _— - — how many| Hoping you wit grant a disabled | radiant peer poy Some aa. These eshvisiione times al |men told hi a “‘ wager not 10) man space in your paper, I am, “1 simply can’t get on w! -y > ‘ ‘ - é a a ae ” wegpemg pecomagers per cent of them. | A VOCATIONAL STUDENT, —<& wih any 05 Sabet pan a ome pasa ee, saying, howe olay «lene If ho will attend any of the meet-| With Two Years’ Overseas Service. ail make we feet Tike = kid. tena’ Fe ‘Boom Basahe | = me, ‘vanquished. e ———— 7 -~— al has poor Garden Home, No ugly streeta. No the other would lose and could Spokane’s Attack i wen veneue mean ndings, Bree | N. D, Hall it to the front. 4 4 he forced to pay. The British e's At on Pigeons x Pr ewaeer man. Thomas brag-| where “uplige” — alone refused to leave the finan [Yin Me Sr a wetth Spokane, | ig thd the Dassershy by Nenrtiensty ged several. months ogo that bel” ‘rere slipped out of Sabre ° kane, | killing birds that belong to us all? would bring Hall into the race. wie’ wou are. 4 cial stability of their coustry to [or any other city that alaughters {ti| Inn't there disease enourh tn Spe. Hall was nominated by the West | ting.” a oe —— the doubtfal arbitrament of war. | picron friends? I cannot see kane to keep the doctors buay—| | Seattle conference after their repre} Mr. Boom Bagshaw, as ff} They paid-enough cut ef pocket, |P°W any man who reepect! drink, dope, accidents and heaven| | sentatives had conferred with the | close without fear precisely whavbe i despite the pain of it, te keep a if or others can walk up to/ knows what—without their suddenty| | {Union league advisory committee | was, dismantled from between tem | fhemecives from being over aad tiny, brighteyed, irideacent, getting germ-crazy and undaly exelt < of 42. the hedgo of flowers which he iidhesed by the wmaxpocted |shoct their ance nct ey And calmly |ed about our pigeons? fines when| | i] | two of Went Seattle's large clubs | repiaced and looked sulkily shoo r hea , OF, aiming bad-| doen the medical profession assume! | ii : | hen realized that | + Hiy, see them flo (dt pag nll gio — i-} : withdrew w they What kind of thing?” a ee enaing. Come tee oe clined te mee ne police force and) | : — wf * their well meaning movement had! gabre had a vision of hime sb quences of the conflict. jo va wt rhe ote rg ¥" 4 vod - functions of a city? j cv o— : | been appropriated by slick politicians. | vancing an egg for Mr. Bagsbar's It is not primarily because of | jews povn ea PB 0d afta pipes sirens, | » The withdrawal of these two or-|hammer. “About having no poor is Great Britain's wealth, but .be | Washington hasn't many birds—|pewinn. The piescre mee nee were | ae ®s, fantzations carried 15 delegates from | the Garden Home. Isn't there som [ ——— cities almost none. Heantifal at = he pigeons are not a deters SOE TIC eS Rae Pe eee mrs fae VU the convention, over one-fourth. thing about the poor being always cause of the voluntarily imposed © aalicg porters ee a) street | ment to the welfare of anyone. When Now here is something peculiar. | with us?” J high tax rate that British finan- isty an otherwise unap-|we banish all sense of justice and DOORS here were 58 qualified votes before| “Certainly there is.” W Peased human need and desire to see sympathy to the animal world, we feu y | . ial stability has been made se Jand fondie something of the anima! banish It alse in our dealine with hy LITTLE door joins every little room the 15 withdrew and 66 were counted} “In the Bible?” eure. It would be anfair to se | World © Innocent and so lovable mans, A police force or medi oi And doorways mark cach cherished threshold place; afterwards, “In the Bible. Do you know to cept payment of interest from | Prac tically all cities have thet In addition to the withdrawal of | whom it was addressed?” | tr | group that knows neither justice nor Thru the eyes of every lovely face | , | Pigeons, objects of interest, often, mercy im a dineredit t i the Dumar and the Southwest Seat-| Sabre admitted that he didm’t Great Britain as = matter of | RI, UI OF, interest. often morey is a discredit to any city and We always look to find the soul in bloom, tie Improvement clubs, as above! “To Judas Iscariot.” (Smash west course and without a word of | elmuchter them + % Cor 8 Cue, = Ane ty Our dreams are golden doors thru which we go mentioned, two other clubs have since | the egg) | a in Spokane shows a | standers, acquiescent by their silence 9 appreciation. Praise must be giv. | callousness. a brutality, an utter lack [f not otherwise, have p Aocggee cn | To fair Olympus from Reality; pulled off from the movement.| Sabre sald feebly—he could act en to British statesmen for their | 0% “Ppreciation of beauty, tendernens age or the finenens to defend a pitt Tf these deere were closed how dork would be Numerous well known citizens are|handle his arguments—“Well, amy the British }or any humane instinct. Decent) ful, mangled plreon, havé they the Th not lending their support—such menj| way, ‘always with us'—there heed witen snd to Preple | members of the police force will not| courage and deka eed eae e interlude alone cach heart must know! as John Bennett, Marion Edwards, | « If you're going to enate 3) ] for their willingly accepted mone- | want to kiil them, nor should they be other helplews pereon on Jackson Silsbaugh, John D. Shorett,| place wh life is going to be lived: tary sacrifices. They have | forced to. Sites tenaae eons S65 Se Oto ACH fleeting day ts but a door of hours W. B. Brinton, J. W. Daniels, C. C.| as it should be lived, I don’t eve hon)! earned the rewdré that such fidel- 2 Isn't there erime enough tn Spo-| Let the pigeons alone. T te the Thru which we pass from all the Yesterdays }Querin, John Williams and D, A.| you're going to shut the sn te i ane to keep the police busy withont| unkindness of the 14 that by “4 Into Tomorrow, with all its promised powers— Walters. jit. Aren't they a part e ity to national duty will surely themselves making the streets a fu upen us es me, pret ook poe —— An arch of years builded with todays. It's too bad that West Seattle peo-| They've got as much right to ti | bring. lade of sound, spattering the and of these a 7 . ple have been jobbed by a bunch of|}away from mean streets and Wye) 1 of these we have had enough Along each road and highway stand these do | : re | walks with blood, frightening or mak. | L. M. CLARKE. = on wee ones jeap politicians, but pomibly it will |surroundings as we have—andajayg) 3 a - That lead the way to all Life's treasure stores. a lesson at the next election when |sight more need. Always wits miles past my district, but do you they ean close their doors to chest.|1t doesn’t matter tuppence whom # nut pul se ne ares tea | The Way Hall Was Nominated NES AT Ta — — Hers of the special interests | Was said to,” Know there is not a line of boats | . : along the Mississippi today from | Editor The Star: Thomas, henchman-inchiet of the|”” real estate man, and influential) West Seattle candidate, Each ot | Jay Thomas took things into his | and select thelr own candidate. | “It happens,” pronounced Mr, md the upper part down to Bt. Louis, If N. D. Hall, poreur as Weat Se! puget sour pea . politician of West Seattle, was noml- these clubs was asked to choose dele |handa, Whe delegation was divided) In the meantime, Jay Thomas wit om Bagshaw, “to matter a grett i @r down to the mouth of the river, |attle candidate for the counell, car get Sound Power & Light Co., and | n t a meeting of West Seattle gates to sR in a convention and de-| between Har Waller and W. C./have an awful time pulling Candi. | deal more than tuppence, It happemt ‘except one boat line which is owned |ries his own community in the com.|°P¢ of the advisory committee of 42] Pe #0 tainted wit estionable cide on a candidate for whom they | Zimmer, with Zimmer leading. |date Hall thru, encumbered with— |to knock the bottom clean out @ By this government? You have | primary election, {t will be a|™members chosen by the Union league, |“@cUc that it nauseat numerous could all vouch and work. Their rep: | Thomas succeeded in obtaining a de-| The Union league indorsement, | your argument, It was addressed @ hs auatied sllien on the ’ “ Vane sea wendak ty © citizens, who with. resentatives selected on a per capita/lay in the final choice. He held a] Stone-Webster backing, the Iscariot because the Iscariot wit ewer Mississippi river and have Hall ig not the West Beattie can-| several months ago as ipation in the selec numbered 68 {number of private confe on Selling #hort-weighted coal convic-| trying to do just what you are Uy Mot got one boat with an eight-foot jdidate. He is the creature of Jay assistance of W. T. Cam ’ Seattle representa Th people were honest in the) W. T. Campbell, with his West Se | tion, ing to do, He was trying to makt Graft of water the year round. | — - Rae “ ’. effort to select @ man representative attle Commercial club, rallied to} And serious opposition at home. duty to the poor an excuse for gral ee whe geoflemdn from Bt were originally 16 clubs|of their community, long neglected |Thomas’ support. Between them| I would say it is some job! ing service to Christ, Now, liste MAUDE SW \ (Turn to Page 13, Column 1) Pas Louis (Mr. Newton) gave the cor- | united in an effort to bring forth ajby the city administration, Yammer and Waller were ditched fect answer—because the railroads | (Take Mok - " nner eas have driven them off.—Representa- | e nn a aes BY BSfs = =. | Ls | fs the man who argues with one. = | ac { eet vchetenetiaate I study all the colored plates, and read of “earlies,” “ ” : i | and read ” “main: Voliva says, “There's no peace || tates,” so if I had a batch of ground I'd harvest erops the whore , 2 en earth; nothing but hell.” His year ‘round, with everything there ever was, from artic y — ee , | neighbor must have a phonograph. ainnias Tsering ins: catia M. i 3 A lect ke y And your sons and your daugh- | _ fers shall prophesy, and your | Young men shail sce visions, and | Your old men shall dream dreams, || Dear Folks: —Acts 4:17. When crocuses are coming out and hawthorn branches start to | |] sprout I like to get a quiet nook and sit or Soak Bedtime theory: 1 get my tes- that sete m | and read the ye visions all agog—the seed and flower catalog m plant a thing, you know—I haven't room for stuff to i nor have I ever sayvied how to run a harrow or a plow, but Bons in the morning. I One fool digger than a dig foot gro even #0, it rests my eye to mee the thingn I'd like to buy. Men who ought to be out making Dusiness boom are sitting around Blaming everything on the war. Kitty It does me good to rit and stare at sweet.old-fashioned flowers ON GROUNDS | there; and I can let my fancy go to gardens that I used to know | hi Te unpretentious blossoms spoke their friendly word to common thea], ka Se And when I've read the whole book thru, I meditate on what to aso, On Des Moines Highway, 14 mile south of South Park. | | Starting April 8, 1922, at 1:30 P. M. Nowadays, when a woman speaks do, and think of ali I'd like to plant, and sigh because I know I . A Fie sri ef her late husband you never || can't; I come to earth in thought and deed—and buy a pack of and it’s an ideal month to visit this top ' know tf she means late or latest. | radish seed! o’ the world wonderland. ae i Pos | ut some day there may come'a time—in heaven or a warmer Earlyvacationistswill find Alask: 1 i \e a and our ; Bome people could say what they || Clime—that I may have a patch of ground where flowers, trees and May excursii i Sold Highest Bidder, wi servati think and still be quiet. | hrubs abound, and then I'll order like a h ‘Just send the wholo y rsions extremely delightful — the & sidder, without reservation. I most interesting, attractive and economical vacation trip in America. The da’ East the fies now or the flies . and balmy, nights only comfortabt ee ho LEARN A WORD land waters with meals and berth included, EVERY DAY GEOGR APHIC PUZZLES rok or eta information and litera. | : ture descriptive of this vacation trip of trips. wane | larn catalc SEVENTY ACRES Highly Improved River Bottom Tracts from %% Acre Up. OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS Also About 100 Acres 1 | Upland, subdivided into suburban Home Sites. SASY TERMS Today's word is AMITY * \ ‘TICKET OFFICES: t me: friendship, good will eon | E.G. McMICKEN, Gen, Pass. AgtpLn C. Senith Ae elephone Elliott 0576. 4 pence, harmon ae —) } Gen, . Bidg., Seattle, Wash, : 1€ fi nil > bkh : . 1 comes ‘om—Latl “a eu + 4 eS ’ a 2 iw eeligtnmes from—Latin “amicus,” | eae Pacific Coastwise Servive Or oo hoe onatative'tn office on the grounds. A representative will c he ground every day, Sundays included, up to date of sale. BLUPP —~L+ aLlTER—TER+0 = BUPFALO CEE HF ALEXANDER. PRESIDENT