The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 15, 1922, Page 7

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; a ’ i ; 4 * a APRIL 15, 1922 SATURDAY, Is Subjects Star Readers What Does It Matter to You? part Why not use her own given name Wil! Mra. Het jes, candidate |'instead of traveling under hubby's? for do & en Does she vote as Mra, Henry? elected MAY I. KNOW? _Mrs. Landes and the Bolo Club KY st But that is vastly different trom Please help me correct the falae|the inference that Mra. Landes in. that Mra, Landes in /4°P#e@, or is in any way mixed up }with, the Bolo club or any of its rte in any way mixed UD | candidates with. the Bolo club or any of 4 To anyone who knows Mrs candidates: | Landes, and also knows the sinister That they indorsed her for their! history of the Bolo club, the hfe own selfish, sinister purposes ofjénce ix utterly impossible Re-| drawing suffrage votes to their can. | spectfully yours. didates and repelling votes from Mrs G. N, HODGDON. Landes is true enough, 828 BH, 46th St Who Can Give an Answer? Exlitor The Star I telephoned Mr. Cole of the city I ows & home that is next to a | #ehOols and he stated the schools There boys of achool age | PAV PO control after a child reaches vacant jot : home, congregate after schoot hours, build! iy that case, who has? Ia our fires, fight, use profane language, | property endangered and our peace and in summer molest my fruit {of mind rulned and we have fo prop 1 have pleaded with them and re-| er source to apply to? ceive only taunts, I am afraid to| The fire marshal secured a few of leave for a few days’ outing for fear! the names of the boys. they will burn me out, not maliciode | ficult to learn who they all are ly. but thru carelessness, Last Sat.) If you can give me any informa Uriay I counted 20 boys on the/tion that will allow me to live in Grounds. The fire marshal came to} peace after svhool hours and during see about the fire. This is within a| vacation I sill feel grateful Bidck or two of the city pla} fields! aC ITIZEN AND A TAXPAYER. 11 Hours’ Work for $1.83 Editor The Star: land Being « reader of The Star for a| The wages are $1.40 for eight! Good many years, and noting the / hours, but you have to work three good you have been doing for the | hours overtime, which makes you suppression of long working hours | @ total of $1.83 for 11 hours of hard for the laboring clasa, I wish to call | labor. The work is of the most tire the readers of your paper to the | some kind, ay many of your readers working condition in the Puget | know Ac OW, Sound Box & Shook Co.'s plant, sit. P. S--This t# the democracy w Wated at Mth and Leary ave, Bal ‘fought for in France. Page the Park Board Editor The Star: | tt he cannot prevent them from be - P what Way Gam the layatories | ing written? These seemed to be old and benches in the public parks be | writings and pictures. kept clean of obscene writings and! Can you answer in your columns pictures? las to who \is responsible and to Yesterday 1 was at Volunteer park | whom a complaint seit be made And was shocked, to say the least,| These are things which I shdéuld not at the pictures and writing done inj} want my children to eee and the Pencil and chalk tm the lavatories | public parka are for the children. and on the sides of the stand pipe. | Yours reapectfulty, ‘These are not in concealed positions, | JENNIE SMITH Dut where one must see them if he) oe has an tty I would suggest making a com Ig it not the duty of the caretaker) plaint in writing to the park board. @f the park to remove such things! —Eajtor. Taxpayer Favors. Proposition A ery vated en ‘einietl’ he ig: | Now then, many families have as a ene Damietin’ Me, many as three taking the cars every Gated March 18, from the Voters’ In| gay which would be a saving of + reanathonge eal Pape: Ag $99.84 a year, They sure could pay and what to vote for this coming @lection. Said bulletin seems to take Bride in Maying the Erickson street ear plan. It also shows « great interest @ll home owners for fear they will Jose their homes thru excess taxa. tion, Some propaganda. Mr. Voter, just you do some figur. & good increase in money to spare, I say, tax the property owners then the large owners of this vacant in| Property would pay their share to wards paying for our street car lines. As it now stands, the burden falls on the laborer and the many hug | dred girls who ride the street care) fig and ere. how the extra tax an |°V*TY 47 to and from thelr work. | Give us the Scent rate and then the} Your Property works out. For ¢x-| etiows that are working agsinat it your work six days a week arid re will come in and ply their share to {urn on a d-cent fare. You have paid | Wards the enk lines, whereas they arc 26 cents per week. At the 8%-cent | Sttting by without paytng one cent. fare you pay $1 a week; you save 64| Y°Ur® for proposition A cents per week, which amounts to J. Ro McLAIN, $93.28 per year | A Taxpayer. English View on St. Pat’s Day but it ia dif} tax and have} Onn were nino in the L also understand that Mr. Ford (nt his son exempted from service Mr. Newberry and Mr, Ford, in thelr | campaig oul mateh dollar for | dollar ey both spent their own |money, The masses were the gainer by the clroutation of coin. The peo. | ple of Michigan od 4 that Mr | Newberry represent’ them the United Bt nate. I believe that in & matter forefikn to our own per sonal affairs, It undoubtedly tx a bad precedent to ¢pend the amount of money that was apent in that} campaign for office. But what would you de if youshad. been in Senator Poindexter's place? He undoubtedly eOnsidered the lwsue and cast his vote with his best It iw true it will convictions take a big Man vated the Indian women, ) raising | n te an equality with their men, | | 1 cannot tell one-hundredth art it in thie short article, but 1 wish | the whites Knew more about this work of ¢ among our neg and true American For 15 years I have been studying and investigating It, and trying to discover some way of britging the Shake h up into real ehureh relations, and into a purer Chris tlanity Be one cannot hurry an Indian, he must thoroly masticate tis given him, fully digest it, to defeat Poindex but The Star, with’ ite sense of justide and for the state of Washingte of h we #0 proud, would be loing & big thing if it pointed out the calamity that would befall us in sending & new man to the senate Wap not indeed a big man, ‘The knows what little we could ex pect from a new sen in the sen ste for several years, and we do know what my v Poindexter can for us, and we also know how badly we need some fat the helm for the next couple years to pilot the | state of Washington thru the shoals and safely anchor her amongst prow pority which #! Kine uJ Charleston, eo wurely ¢ rely, eaerven MeINTYRE, Deutsch to Come Back | Raitor The Star It ts with confidence that I write this to a newspaper which every day heads ite first p with "On the Iesue of Americaniam There Can Be No Compromise,” so the tdple can | be brought before the American peopie ‘The Star only has to look over tts own columns of the front page at or about the time we entered the war | to find out that I fully patriotic cause and ce enpecial r ly in the cause of having that das | | Kerous “Deutseh” book, “The Vater | land,” taken from the public schools } The mont insidious propaganda for [the destruction of Americaniam was | Gurried on by the “Deutsch” press | before and during the late Bure war, The propagandists invaded, or were intrenched, in public schools, indulging In pestiferous per our formances and protestations to prop | * jagate pacifinm in order to enervate and nullity any demonstration or agt tation for Americaniam and the up or nea, Preparedness is the price of safety 1 am credibly informed that the “Deutsch” installed in our Seattle public achools; and certain “Deutsch” propagandin who have not been removed, but whe have been retained on the school pay Editor The Star: would like to tell her that [ taught school 13 years before I was mar | ried, and have raised a family of I was a charter mem Mothers’ congress, only ropped out when I found that the Organization waa a rubber stamp for | the achoot office, and have helped in many ways to put over our present extravagant administration ptil 1 became interested in tax reduction last summer, when I woke up to t fact that our city was in a fair way to go bankrupt of checking expenditures was evolved I stand for tax reduction, and the only can get it is by salary reduction. We have Mr, Shorrock’s own word for that. I did not charge |the school board with inefficiency, | but the present school management As for the connection between the | university and the public school, peo | ple who wish to enter the “U's must really know something before they in do so, and they usually get that knowledge in the public achools, and it is & matter of public record that the pupils from the Seattle hich schools ranked very low aa entering freshmen thin past year tour children. ber of the unless some means way we Why all this fierce sympathy for | the poor (7) teacher? In the report of the Seattle school district for 1 Editor The Star [as0. after my marriage to an Amer I must say I agree with Alice Mon-/jcan, I lived in Engiand all my life roe and not L. M. Clarke about St.jand have traveied in both Ireland Pat's day Jand Scotland. [ am part English | 4 pour in its | an} ‘The lady who answered my letter on April 12 is so very far out of ber | reckoning in her “guesses” that I rolt Deutsch” t in j@iven charge | girls with full | their minds Americaniam Constitution, ne. patriotic language preas have ba We ther w ponitions aguinet This | We ought hot to forge lgiven by that great democrat of revolutionary perlod, who signed Declaration of Independence “Benjamin Americana ¢ poison Amer and wld not be aah, than ching, are again to be of our school boys and| pportunity t the warning nd our Franklin,” of “Deutach” utech” teach ugh anguish already thru forgetting or disregard Ing his advice. arrived and must for us to reinstate public patriovc lineage | ung | They come to Deutsch” ly school for Amerie Amert fluently wll and an, ane speaking practical and to follow their good example, holding of American rights on land|of burdening them with of a tye! to their child inetend the load they have attempted to | ly jing jane are given for 1 Average salary for grade teacherw im propaganda is to be again | Amer them stupidity 1 reacts ICHARD MANSFIELD WHITE. elude th an ot n. 30-31, course, into em comparative years, the outac | helping hand physically in our prpEreanive inatead of thrust bacurtty The ume has not yet never arr “Da There are ¢ “Deuteth” the pUrponen soon in our nough lan | | | ake it hie own before he will «ive ign of accepting it. The Shak nomtiy uneducated, and old Indians, but intelligent ones, and this » dors not appegl; neither can it natinfy the younger, more progres sive and educated Indians, It will have to rise to a higher plane, de- velop into @ fuller Christianity, be fore it can reach the great mans whe have almost no religion at all. But lif the Shakers will only tuke a for | ward stop, they might become a great lever that our Indians. (MISH) SARAH FE will raise and uplift all DICOTT ONE al } ) Miss Grace Taibot won the |Avery” prize in the Architec-| | tral league exhibit, New York. She is a Junior League \girl. Her mother, Lily Tal- |bot, was a painter of note. The Columbia Basin Project | Bdltor The Star Your editorial in your issue of th 10th instant advising Seattle to ge behind the Columbia basin irrigats project was fine, This project as approved by Gen, Goethals is the most wonderful development that has ever been proposed for upbuilding the Pacific Northwest }. It will bring fixed and substantial | prosperity jour great America to escape the | advancement ought to every community state, and inconceivable to all clases of our help | population them in their desire to become en-| very throw Vigilance is the price of liberty and | off; we ought to extend to them the ana ment and degeneracy Mrs. Stewart Writes Again | pages atagiotion Hike this This great proposed development is so enormous in its potentialities, no Vast In ite p@enibilities that the people of our state as a whole have not uriderstood or grasped the full | meaning of its advantages and bene. | fits. We just as vitally concerned, commer clally and industrially interested as the people in Spokane and the in land empire in thie project, and it must be our fight as much as Spo | kane's to get back of it with feet and all our power, unfortunate and most unfair to our people here that the impression in ! astern Washington has grown that © not interested in their prot we lems, and are a people self.suf ficient to ourselves. Today the city of Portland con. trols and appropriates the bulk of |thé products and business of the | great Inland empire, Why? Because jour financial 1911, $1,008; 1913, $1,024) 1916, $1,089; 1919, $1,302; 1920, $1,532; 1921, Si.s89.41 Average salary for high school | teachers; 1913, $1,540; 1913, $1,447 1916, $1,501; 1919, $1,739; 1920, $1,900; 1 $2,169.80. Average salaries, if you please something like $800 raise in 10 years, and note the large last three yearn. par’ CENT OF Nobody ck on their prewar pay, interests of the put ts TH wa increase i natin ued in rer be out ta the teachers to be but y and the taxpayers it ts ax¥ed that the teach ers be patriotic enough to accept that duction and in all fairness, subject and personalities? Last year the other workers tm the | school department offer one-fourth of the rane the! | bay, As that was really a bonus, arid as | job, ner auch gifte were dine what in asked te that 2 INCREAS institutions are not in me touch and aggrensively reach | ing out for business across the moun. In the of crop apples, taine mov financing ments such as gra wool, ete, Portland and it seems imponsibie to get jour financial institutions interested. Last summer the port of Seattle for the first time maintained com mercial representatives among apple and wheat producers of Kast ern Washington to divert freight and | We opened | tonnage thru our port, our wheat elevator here and put thru, for the first time in years, why cannot the/some inland empire wheat, and we be discussed withgut rancor 4 to take a 10 per cent cut If the teachers would | reduction the fused, hence there was only the small! rrickson street car meanure of $260,000, same but the teachers which re small per centage of total expendi. | ( ture of $5,397,267 schools MRS ANNE B. The Indian Shaker Religion 36 in 1921 for the STEWART. in the Puget sound basin, are | both | It is mont | in on the! the | Iso handied other products, apples, potatoes, ete., but we found two in- surmountable obstacies—first, the n|lack of financial arrangements thru | | Beattie: second, the differential in | wheat rates from Kastern Washing, ton into Portland, discrimination against our port. Portland for years has lived off | the resources of our state. ‘Thru her banks and commercial houses she | aggressively combs ington, Idaho and Montana for busl- nem. The wheat crop is financed in Portland and Spokane; |erop of Idaho, Montana, ton and Oregon is financed in Port: jland. ‘Thru her repfesentatives in Washington city she ha | stons able men to divert shipping and produce to her, Portland has a man on the ship | ping board—Portiand has a repre: | sentative on the interstate commerce commission. Portland haa a 10 per cent differential in grain rates on the interstate commerce commission. | What has Seattle? Echo answereth NOT. Our financial instivutions, our suc ceastul business men and the peo- ple of our city and county might as well understand, however unpleasant the pill is to swallow, that there i» |no powsibility for our city to reach |itw great manifent destiny unless we |are aggressively attempting to assist | jand build up other communities in | this, our state, Spokane is destined with her min- |ing, agricultural and manufacturing resources to become one of the greatest inland cities in America. Spokane's problems are our prob. lems. Puget sound is the cant. The stream of t | proxperity must flow thru us, pro tion and mutual good will, stecl. Respectfully, GEO, B. LAMPING. Losing Sight of Féitor The Star: I think we are losing track of the main point in the discussion of the Why | not decide that Beattie ian't to be made the Wughing stock of America by monkeying with « wildeyed | ncheme offered by Erickson? Then why not let the council know that voters expect them to run our sy« tem as efficiently and with equal economies as do private companies? the Main Point shape today than when it was pri. vately owned. Recommendations | have been mado by Superintendent | | Henderson to cut operating expenses so that a lower fare can be obtained | He haw maid fares can be reduced this year {f businens conditions, which de- | termine travel, pick up just a bit |He knows. Erickson saya, “Other Jeitjes talk about our 10-cent fare,” He doesn't even credit us with an S%-cont fare, He doesn’t want a [6% or a Scent fare, He wants to |try out a new system of municipal financing. He says he wants free fares, Let the voters who want a llower fare serve notice on Erickson jand others that we propose to have a lower fare by the council showing the same brains private companies do over the United States. I am tired jof the 8%-cent fare, Likewise I am sick unto death of civic saviors like Erickson, His plan is not the right way out The street car eystem was wished on the taxpayers, at the time of the shipyard activities, by persons who |had no interest in the resulting re | mponsibilities, and now to incur per sonal benefit and to secure self-grati- [fication and a meal ticket, to stay Erickson is |longer at the public teat, willing, for 30 pieces of silver, to be. | tray his fellow citizens, Voters, “Let nee be your RALPH H. 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Write EARWIG-BATE (Poison) th poison and eweetening— edients—just add water and 15-Pound Package, $1.50 Inspector, and FP, Seattle Health approval of J, 8, Coyne, sion of the rtificate For Sale by Dealers Everywhere and at LILLY’S Seed Store Pioneer Square ‘The Irish themselves in Ireland do/and part Irieh, half of each, but my | Editor The Star Jother vices, and established clean,| Hach year our system has to pay not keep that day to the big extent} folks always gave me to understand In Mabel Cleland’s article about | Godly, upright living. Many of the | approximately $1,600,000 on the pur L. M. Clarke thinks they do. | that orange and not green was wee | the Shaker Indians, there are many | Shakers own their homes and have|chase bonds and interest. When The Engitah do not keep their own | color of Protestants in Ireland. B incorrect statements that I wish to! autos and launches, and they are| Stone & Webster owned the ayxtem holidays with the exception of a mil-| read the Orange and the Gree: igh more The Indian Shakers are in| good citixens an well as Christians.|they had to pay at least $1,600,000 itary parade first Sunday following! You aay, L. M. Clarke, the Amertino way connected (neither did they | They have their own churches and| taxes, dividends,| gross income tax, Empire day. Very few people know|cans hold Dominion day. 1 beg to| originate) with the Shaker» of the| keep them clean and attractive. They | paving and special assessments, etc when Royal Oak day is and why it differ; I did not know there was such |i¢th century in England. ‘howe have bishops, eldera and church of-| levied by the city. In other words is held. The Engiish do npt keep/|a day, as it is not held in the mother| shakers were banished in 1634 and ficials, and several hundred licensed | what the system has to pay on the U. S. hglidays with the exception of | country, and 1 have never, previous | established their church In New Eng: | preachers. The Shaker believe in| bonds and interest will be offset by "Christmas and New Year. jto last ‘night, heard of it |iand, where their settlements re|God as the Father and Kuler of man-| what the «ystem does not have to Mothers’ day, St. Valentine's and| With the exception of Hallowe'en. | mained until recent years. When kind: in Jesus Christ, Hix Son, ax the | pay in taxes Y ood hh are eae Hallowe'en are not held there at all. | there ig no English, Scotch or Welsh | put a girl I visited a Shaker settle-| savior of the world, and in the Holy | absorbed by the taxpayers. There ‘The latter is still held In parts of! holiday held. Why hold an Iri#h?/ ment in Alfred, Maine, and was fa | Spirit as guide and revealier of] fore, if Stone & Webster had a S-cent Scotland. Do you not think it would | If you will look thru the Washing-|miliar with their peculiar practices| Father and Son. [fare and paid out 91,000,080 0 year | ie Sete Siew Ae any te Se See Soe ener Salers ce es 18nd beltets, hey know tere eaven, for| that we now pay for bonds and in the whole British empire to celebrate | not find Dominion day mentioned or| The Indian Shaker religion is pure | ataatnasiaed tac Bcd meray os here, way abt pes & extnaty eb July 4—the day we lost America? |any foreign holiday with the excep-|ty Indian, with a strong basis, and for “the angele told him about |to Erickson, as chairman of the utill I am not talking from hearsay, as/ tion of St. Patrick's day. P. B.. vital belief in Christianity. It < . Y Go not sare for the Bivie, {ties committee, and counciimen, to Pe ee ee om Hull, England. {inated in November, 1881, with tW0) believing they have direct revelation |be a# efficient street car operators us ra Squaxim Indians at Mud Bay, ear! trom God, and do not need it, One| as were the private company? In ewco 8 lewpoin {his wife, Mary, It had its inception | poly pible straight trail to God, but | line and are paying off bonds, The Editor The Star: | in, the Rowe City. If some Eastern | |” the sropings ot Bh seem Moers poor Indian have no mind—no time |fare is 6 cents: ‘As & newcomer to Seattle, @ few| cities had as good car service an you | e*t after God—in th Poa : achINg to follow forked trail." W I| Why can’t we have a 6%-cent fare city which needs outsiders to help it! have here today, they would call tne | ee ae souls stow Indian | **¢4 bis meaning he sald, “Cath-/right away, as a starter, and then krow prosperous, | am surprised at| private companies blessed. Eas nd gap wt ogee lics say Holy Bible straight trait to| work for a G-cent tare? In other | this talk of a d-cent fare and higher) I am not defending a high fare. I Ppa cue (0 teats Yod—and it is thelr trail, Method ; | words let's start reducing the fa taxes. have been told by men who oppose |* Tesurrected lite pet oe o ry hints, Presbyterians, Baptists, all eay along sane lines ickson should ‘As one looking on and knowing the 3-cent fare plan that the author bees a anes of sa - er bags it im their trail, but those traile all | have thrown his influence for a low how Eastern people would regard |of this bill voted against thé 5.cent | 50cm died early — bo yond ae fork wi apart—Bible may beler fare instead of voting against the this experiment, I doubt, sincerely|fare a few weeks ago. Thene same tithe ab ora gi by aly non | straight trail-—come all same from |nickel fare ordinance referendum re and honestly, if those who sponsor | men tell me there can be economies | (0 VMN MeO! oa saying Niament | One Place—but it forks wide apart. | cently, He wants to make the fa measure are not millstones on| made which will give a lower fare.| ON 07 eet he then r | Poor Indian got no mind—no time |so high and paints things #o gloomy at@e's neck, rather than civic ben. Seattic iv truly a wonderful city. ti «se eae rod pane inner follow forked trail. | that riders will bite at a cent etactors But your scenery, your climate, your | Pat MN Meant: we was went back}, The Shakers have prayer services| fare” deal no matter how obtained In my old home in Buffalo we pay | Western “pep” and other aanets can. | ( (eh" And Une Ne WL Oe Mwan {that are reverent und beautiful. | There are 46 cities in America with| today a 6%-tent fare. There is no;not get Eastern money and people!” aoy ong Jesus Christ, the fon | They formerly wore white robés, but | Scent fare. All butyone are pri taik’there of making the industries | here if you advertise the highe tax|®) (Pir Mit "lhe some have discarded these, 1 have |vately owned and pay taxes, gross or home owners pay for someone’s|rate in America. astern people are °C 10% Mild murs Mont Mik" 1 ywitneswed many of their services and | income tax, dividends, paving, ete., ride, or of asking the home owner|fed up on high taxes, They are re| 40° hoot Mla Mee ens, be {it Was & wonderful and. impressive | HOt paid by our municipally owned to do more than pay taxes to run the| ducing taxes. They are today lower | 1eDin® 0) UCnnalr Auk Clr tite if | Might to seo weveral hundred stand-| sytem Erickson and the Public government and for his rides when|than Seattle's. They study thone| "YD | lat leks wea ta oor |IMK in ranks, robed in long garments, [Ownership league, of which R. J he takes therm. In Boston I paid 10) things. They will shy at a elty which Hiedians. This message went lke o| WTOP? 4 in reverent p or. "There| Wilson is president, have for years cents. Coming westward, the fare| deliberately Increases its municipal) U0" Nt Minette ev ibe, and (Waa @ spirit of worship and rever | sald municipally owned utilities give in Cleveland ix 6 cents, with a penny|taxes 80 per cent in one year and) ) 1 went gouln were aaved,| enc? seldom seen in any other better service at less cont than when for a transfer, What has become|embarks on an untried experiment.) yee TT ia ang tives transformed, |church. They have Incorporsted | privately owned Now let's prove it Of the famous J-cent fare there? It|I think Seattle in too fine a city to| yous yuan’ tl Lume UiMnmlol mie | many Catholic forms and « |Our system is in far better physical is gone, like the nickel cigar and lce| be wrecked. Let some older city try |i oitome of the goxpel he pre crosses and candles, bells and white cream soda. In Portland the trav¥-| the sch#me firet land lived to ace a strong church es.|T0Des. but many of them have only eler finds an Scent fare, and the JANE W. BANNISTER, | tablished and hundreds of his peopie | known God thru the Catholic chur fervice here ie far-wuperior to th hat | 8 19th Ave. N. Be | hae He wan well known in| They have their Shaker dance in the a l oly and hia story and life work |¢Ven!ng, for the dance wax the In F ; d f P. H di te S |has been corroborated by prominent | MM" Way of worshiping or Sap riend of Poindexter 8 cs kage [tend Tyee" Biver bells ara used tor Editor The Star the individual irrespective of his| At first there was wild fanaticiam | MUSIC and ‘to furnish Vaca for In your innue of the 1th instant| standing in social Hife, and Senator |among the Shakers, and a confusion |490Clog or marching, and they have | I read editorial, “The Problem | Poindexter ‘has ‘never been found| of beliefs and practices, many old In| ™#PY chants or invocations to God, Of Poindexter wanting when it came to being of |dian ways being pr lent Set | ore ga tribal aie ttiioea ted tt con a wubscriber of The| servide to his friends. Jevery decade han shown a great ad: | Fs." Chinook and a few in Kngliah: | Star £ past 20 years, and I! The Newberry case is going to be| vance into Christianity, a sloughing| The yg Tig gg ee tie Meg have ha very friendly feeling for|an issue in the coming campaign,| off of ancient Indian beliefs ar 4 oF Chetet: to ve ibs a Mixed ready for use, wi Senator lexter for the past 15|and that being the fact, we owe it|practices. In 1892 Judge Jamen|*4¥e and I have witnessed as bo bothering with dry ingr Years, and the fact that I have been|to ourselves and to our state to go| Wickersham of Tacoma, afterwards | °A%*s of healing. The Shaker religion apply: & submcriber for The Star for the/ into the details thoroly. We have] Alaskan representative, helped the has performed ge A eb was above shows that I have {conditions now that the world has|Shakers incorporate their organiza | inwtituted bodily cleantines: Kd w Sut upy Alibre the inal very t gard for it never known before in its history.|tion and establish thelr church to|%# spiritual ne change’ éronks hei bivca A SB I ha efrained from expressing |Th& majority of us gave up every-|save them from the per tions and.| 1eraded lives we anf . y be > C. ‘Hakle, Horticultural my viewn of some of the attacks; thing thru patriotism, and our sym-|oppositions of government officials | ONC: has healed the sic ‘ aS 97 wr abieinlaelat Made against Senator Poindexter by |pathies naturaily go slong these|and mirxsionaries, Since then the| ished better ways of living andy 2 readers of ‘The Star for. the above|lines, As 1 understand,’ Mr, News| Shaker church has grown and spread | Ore sanitary ones, and it has ole | Peasor it The Star Bas always \berry served thruout the war in the| until now it reaches from California | Biocon, but The Mier Mae evans a7 #0 See sca’ tie was| Cor tip: the Brian Colurabian const RODD IS Supreme for Foot Comfort | Justice 1 1 am glad to see the ed-| placed: when he signed the roll he|and extends over the mountains to | tender wt ¥ ae pe cived, Robing | Morias question lwas subjected to any duty or place|the Yakimas, Spokanes and other in-|centa (silver). Full treatment. (On Senator Poindexter has done, a|the government saw fit to place id tribes | Dollar, deliveréd. 1 W. Labo freat deal for this state: not only | him Wherever it has gone it has abot | {orien PaO. Box, Seven the state, but has been @ friend tol 1 also understand that his threejished drunkenness, gambling and) rs ¥ Kastern Wakh- | the wool | Washing | placed | strategically on government commis. | wheat nouth of the Snake river, such | discrimination against us being thru | great { ocean port for the country to our ir and our} vided ‘that thru friendship, co-ordina- we Ue our mutual interests up with bonds of PAGE 7 Soap in first mentioned by Pilny. eel Thorne Resigns to Enter Senate Race he NEW CANDIED LAXATIVE CHICAGO, April 16 ifford | Thorne, director of the department FOR? CHILOREN OR prbh. | for the American Farm I mu fed United States wenatorial race in Town | ne was formerly commissioner Th | of ra bw on the , iia es ‘ THE GOTATEST ACTEOS 1 THE WOOLEY "| WO KReP IM UNG AND BOWELS ORDERLY GOOD DRUGGISTS No been appointed to take his place ‘ation ! AT ALL muce lroady in Lowe } THE WILKES Foci BEGINNING SUNDAY MATINEE The Delightful Belasco Triumph “DADDIES” Which Ran for 400 Nights in New York City A Word Symphony of Laughter and Tears Is Shown for the First Time in Seattle Staged under the personal direction of T. Daniel Frawley A $3.00 attraction to introduce the following summer prices: NIGHTS—Lower Floor, 75c and 50c, ‘ 50c and 25c. MATINEES—Entire Lower Floor, 40c. 30c and 25c. ‘Above Prices for Nights and Matinees Include War Tax. a 3. | | PHYSICAL STRENG: "E You are Just as Strong and Healthy as Your B O MAN'c. ; the battles - and hold his his blood is not J for rich red b 5 what si based upon. - you see a stron orous man, who er knows when | licked, youmay Cost an ne man has ¢ ro veins rich, blood. Many people have pale blood. They are weak, | easily, become d quickly, and sometimes feel | giving up the struggle. folks need Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, is sold by druggists in liquid or tablet form; or you can ten cents to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel, in Buffalo, N. for trial package. It adds vigor to the heart beats and tones up the in a wonderful way. This “Medical Discovery” of D Pierce’s is made from Blood root, Oregon Grape root, root, contains no alcohol—yet tones up the stomach, lates the liver, puts the blood-making glands in the b condition. Your nervousness is over. Try the “D now! This is what folks in every town say about it Portland, Oreg.—-“I could scarcely get around to my duties, and, knowing that I needed something to this condition, I went into a drug store and asked the d gist what he thought would be best for my conditions! immediately recommended Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical 1 covery, so 1 bought a bottle and commenced taking it nt helped me right away. After the second bottle I felt fi my appetite was greatly improved and I gained sti right along.”—John Franklin Cox, 1248 E. Yamhill St. Dr. Pierce, President. of the Invalids’ Hotel in N. Y., will give you medical advice free. Write today Advertisement, ECZEMA @ CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You SESSLER St ea mL ware That'emy only argument I've been in the Retall Drug Bustness for or of the Indiana State Roard of Pharmacy and five years as President of tall Druggiate’ Amociation. Nearly everyone in Fort e knows me and About my syeceastul treatment, Over twenty thousand Men. Women and outaide of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements, been cured by t treatment since | first made this offer public, Tf you have Kesema, lteh, Salt Rheum, Tetter—never mind how ment has cured the or saw--give me = chance to prove Bend me yo coupon below and get the trial 1 want to send you FREE. jers acoomplished in your own case WRESRZENEEERUEEE CUT AND Mar rn At CeeC RAST Se eS J. ©. HUTZELL, Druggist, No. 4241 West Main St, Fort Wayne, Please send without cost er obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment, settteseeeeeneess AE opatewman aeeteeeeeeeeseess BURO cece eeeeenens easencwnne 20 years. I served four yeare as yrtet eee nenenege meses:

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