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Prone Bervicn $5.06. im the 44.60 for # montha, or $9.00 per year, By carrier, city, ‘Strange story of “the cave-maniac.” They are made prisoners in a queer building. their necks. They are then thrown, fettered, into a large a Jong time, until a stranger comes to their rescue. ‘Deard of the cave, and, manacled, is thrown into the pit. ‘ates himself. When rescuers set the women free they fly in an insanity of fear. But this is not all. When a throng of people seek to capture their captor, covering people with pistols! And so on. ‘You can’t beat it. Fiction can’t even tie it. It is too wild happened. <=:| The Seattle Star Ty mall, ont of ety, He per month; F months, F158) ¢ montha FATH: Fear, of Washington Outside ef the state, fee per month, Peblisned Patty by The Mar Puplientn Phe bbe a month Fiction Outdone in Omaha The writer of sensational fiction would never dare to use such a plot as the wires have been carrying from Omaha, even if he could have invented it. We mean the Two women accept a ride with a strange man in an automobile. They have chains fastened about pit. Here they remain for He is also taken by the Blue- Be works a screw-driver within reach of his hands with his toes, and with it liber- at the faces of their libera- he fights his way out, and away, stealing motor cars, forcing people to cook for him, and taking his rest , too “impossible.” And yet ‘seems to have happened in prosaic Omaha. All it lacks is some grain of sense and an to make it the greatest sensational plot in the world. But a plot is made; this Tt shows what human minds may actually do when running wild, and what a medley of events can happen when destiny turns its kaleidoscope long enough. ’t accept offers to ride in motor cars with strange men. In the annual spring dr trains, no train casualties More Day r Free Vacation a woman has only to go to The girl question is, of individual rights. In Great Britain, the nation has rights as well as the individual. By the nation is meant the people as a whole. Their law officers main- tain a sharp: watch to see that the rights of the whole are not lost in the courts. Too, wealth is not the power in Great Britain that it is in Amer- ica. This fact prevents it from being given a favored seat when it is brought into court. Justice cannot be bought in Engtand, ex- erpt occasionally in small provin- cial cases when social influence has its sway. will “Perhaps Mr. Taft will be most and impressed during bis visit by the 10 absence of appeals in Great Brit. gin. Justice moves thers without confusing byplays. Horatie Bottomley. just con. demned to seven years’ penal servitude for diverting half a mil- lion dollars of poor people's money to his own use, had 10 days in court. He is a member of partia- a. And it often results injuries. Bride who killed her husband on Pheir honeymoon probably saw him Before he shaved. The Law’s Delays Chief Justice Taft is going to England to study how the British Courts practice «peed. Uf he can bring the secret back home, he | will have performed a splendid } / In your paper of Thursday, June “The ee The Star F there appeared an article on Calender” in which the writer states 1 in the 14 In jthat when it i* January ed States itsis January | Russia, Serbia, Bulgari in your issue of J a of Enumclaw jots this statement. service. In all matters that concern equality of opportunity and guar- two antec to the individual the re- | ing Ward of his industry, America (June 1 he turned « leads the world, Bat, the respect that is paid to individual rights by the American People has tended to obstruct the administration of justice. The in Gividual is offered every chance, | ‘ a* 4 normal part of American life. | Under cover of this national in | Canada, Japan @ulgence , community rights are | gaitor The Star frequently forgotten in the Ameri- I am a former Canadian | €4n courts of justice and the law od bt Caliente becomes a farce. In Great Britain Chief Justice Taft will find there is no pioneer Spirit, and the wheels of justice are not checked by overemphasis A Petter From AIVRIDGE MANN. Dear Fork “The melancholy days are come, the «i poet thought the world was bum, and “Of all the months I've seen, ¢ never used his bean about the m For that’s the month we start to ¢ hot; the sun begins to make us howl, Editor The Star : t A. Arvidsen has served for ars efficiently and well as act carrier on Route No. 5. On or the route to a of the fourth successor on orders Necessary civil serv and otber matters in conne his work. He at this time h status with the postoffice depart t lending the An and for passa fest ef the year’—the ic tear. He said, prune”; I bet he ause it's dry and jong for dear vacation days, on q and June is tough in other ways—for June's th onth of brides.” We'd like to spend a bit of dough for gas or trolley rides; but every cent we nt to blow, must purch: plan @ litte pleasure quest—~a letter cc “Your presents we request on Mary's Vor day by day we gifts for brides; we & our way wedding day.” them fall, those ha it says rls and boy the fat, the thin, the short, the tall—all ditet freedom’s joy with vision blind to future years, they cannot even guess the Gays when eyes will fill with tears and life will seem a mess And could I turn the pages back to freedom’s happy days, and myself another crack at choosing other ways ple I'm wiser now the self-same jane, and get hooked up the choice I'd I'd go and grab then int Ciritye Tamm, rive of motorists against “Has he got a car?” Calls Postal Change an Injustice have been reported. A man will go a long way to save his face; but the drug store. ment and a man of large wealth. He has one appeal, only. While that is pending, he must remain in jail without ball. The judges who will decide bis appeal are entitled, under British law, not only te pass on any pos sible injustice done the prisoner, but to decide also whether any in Justice has been done the British people as a whole. That is te say, if they find Bottomley has been justly convicted but inadequately sentenced, they may Increase the seven years’ penalty, That right of the appeals court serves in it self alone to deter very many cases from being advanced for re view. It ix an example of the practical hardheadednes, with which British justice is adminis tered. Maybe churches are wevally on corners 90 people wilt have @ chance to turn to the right Fifty cente worth of toe isn't always what it is cracked up to be Calendar Date Correction | LETTERS 2 EDITOR Desig Saving Jwhen it i January 1 in the Unt | States it is December 14 in the above mentioned ntries. | I wish to and Mr. Lodyga are wrong and 1 have the Serblan ca r to prove When it is Jar 1 in the United States it is December 19 in| ¢ Russia, Serbia, Bulgaria and Greece. | MIKE PET 2700 10t nee the rural route ished in the I ¢ efficient wus € AUGUBT TOR ' Box 8, R. F. D. No. 5, Se and the U. S. A. on of the Japanese. Dr |torgets that it was the obstru Hoye of the British dominions which George from renewing Japanese alliance when it pired last summer, Instead of being enewed for another 10 years it was y temporarily kept in force for year longer. When that year is over it will die a natural by | reason of the four-power treaty | which takes its place four-power treaty is not an ©, thanks to the resery ations | which were made by the U. 8. sen-| ate when they ratified it. Canada the most positive of all the British dominions in saying she was thru with the ance and the fact that her joint on that issue will satisfies us that ain her point in keeping out he Canadians g to their tarted th tion that may be but « in the United thing that ne ¢ in er treaty will stop it espectfull JOSEPH ALLMAN 118% Third ave New and Used CAMP LEWIS WIRELESS 76 University, Cor, Western Ay 4 Proposes “Wee” = | “daylight sav ate that both The Star THE SEATTLE STAR LEARN A WORD | EVERY DAY Today's word ts PLEBISCITSH, te pronounced—pleb-L-site, with om the first syllable Hea vote or decree of the submitted to them by some person or body hay ing the initiative. It comes from-—Latin “pleba, plebis,"" common people, and “sei tum, decree. | It's used like this—"Chile refuses to agree to a plebisette to settle her | territorial disagreement with Peru.” The March of the Hyphenates Maitor The Star: Your wire dispatches tell how 6,000 Ukranian Americans marched along Fifth ave. in New York, showing ¢ their hearts lay, by protesting against Poland's military occupation ica, The hyphenates bore Placards reading “Down with Polish Tyranny | astern Galicia” and Ukrainians enslaved There were other signs, mian and none American. These particular Ukrainians are bad Americans, The foreign policy of the United States ought not to be wubjected to the infiuence of es in New York or any lean city In the past, America has been too lenient with foreign agitators who conducted their propaganda on Amerioan «oil, America’s only inter este have frequently been jeopar dized because these racial feuds have givon the impression—and some times, with truth—that the depart | ment of state feared the American | foreign vote. But, before the war, American for eign policy was unimportant. Now howe America must take an ip creasingly important part in world affaires. If ts enmential that the state |department be left unhampered by byphenated Americans. Organiza tions in America that keep alive transatiantic cultures must keep out of politica, If they do not do so volun | Uarily, self-protection requires that they be made to do ao by compul sion, MILES MORGAN. for Congress Editor The Star: In your issue of June 2 Ray M Bidleman starts a boom for our own Wee" as U, 8 Senator Miles Poin |dexter’s mucoemor, Ax a G. A. R. man and a Lincoln-Roosevelt sup. porter, I will gladly work for W. J. Coyle, who ts about the only repub ican remaining in the state service since Gov, Hart's code fr “ood practically removed Land Commis sioner Savidge from office and placed authority in the department of sage brush and mountain scenery, whatever they ull it. Fince Kiteap county and the city of Seattle constitute the first con. gresnions! district, would it not be better politics and just as good Americaniam to advance John F. Miller to Poindexter’s place and let Jour “Wee” tag along up? He can do it. Get busy, comrades, and drive the athlete, scholar, soldier and home lover om over the top to the elty of Washington, D. C. to help President Harding in hin noble efforts to re jconstruct the affairs of the world on the stable and wine old American Monroe doctrine plan. Here's to Comrade “Wee™ for con | eress district No. 1, and Miller for U. 8. senator, ALLEN A, BARTOW, , ‘ort Orchard, Wash. | Plan That Works Editor The Star: RE ROM Let me call to your attention a FREE FROM TRUCTIV UND MOTOR OIL f *” plan that works > ULPHO During the summer the National | Broom Co., a Portland concern, let its employes work as many .bours a day, for five days a week, as they ase. Mont of them please to work and a half hours 1 take Saturday and Sun. You can put the e . oe! Arcade Service Station (G. W. Poulson) 603 Westlake Ave. liday tn an orking f « too intact Enea whee & tater a the anf E. R. Ainsworth las true of m law office as a machine} 2257 First Ave. South |shop. The lawyers mind Is too full nts of fishing, baseball or|Auto Supply & Service Co. aturday morning to bother! 1628 Fifth Ave. ents: M. G. OWENS - (Next to Frederick & Nelson) Cecil C. Bagley Company Fifth Avenue North at Roy Boylston Avenue Garage 1617 Boylston Avenue Between B. Pinel. Olive Blue Ribbon Garage 413 Seventh Ave. South J. A. Callier Service Station Ninth Ave. and Seneca St. Central Seattle Gas, Oiling and Flushing Station Sixth Avenue, Between Marion and Columbia Chief Seattle Garage (Lee R. Beardsley) 508 Denny Way Colonial Garage (Wm. Juneau) 1512 Eighth Ave. Curtis Service Station 10th Ave. N. E. and E. 45th St. C. & C. Garage (Christensen & Copestick) 2012 15th Ave. West DR J. Rh BINYON Free Examination ‘BEST $2.50 GLASSES | on Earth | We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really grind lenses from start to finiab, and we are the only one tn SEATTLE—ON FINST AVR Examination free, by graduate op- tometrist. Glasses not prescribed | unless absolutely necessary. | 'BINYON OPTICAL Co,| 1116 FInST avm | Everything About| Cuticura Soap Suggests Efficie nan. LOOK FOR ASSOCIATED | Gasoline Seattle motorists who have toured Oregon and California know the quality of Asso- ciated Gasoline and Cycol Motor Oil. Associated Gasoline has proper initial boiling for easy starting of engines, and also a dry point sufficiently low to cause complete combustion of every drop, thus elimin- ating troublesome contamination of the lubricating oil or carbonization of engine cylinders. This is why Associated Gasoline gives “more miles to the gallon.” Buy Associated Oil Products from dealers named below. Save 4.35% on Gasoline Motor Oils and Greases with our Scrip Books By using Associated Oil Company Scrip Books you save money, time and trouble. The coupons will be accepted by all dealers showing the Associated Sign. Order these books through any of the following dealers or direct from us. The following dealers sell Associated Oil Products: Dearborn Service Station (Wm, Petri & Son) Fifth Ave. S., Corner Dearborn Denny Way and Warren Service Station (C, E. Knaack) 101 Warren Ave. Eastlake Garage 1608 Eastlake Ave. Fairview Garage & Service Station (W. R. Johnston) 9235 Rainier Ave. Granger Motor Service Co. 2209 East Madison St. Half Way House (James McEwing) Twelfth Avenue at Cherry Hillman City Garage & Service Station 5701 Rainier Ave., Cor. Orcas Johnson & McLean Service Station 4910 Leary Ave. Kinnear Garage (Hugo Graf) 403 Queen Anne Ave. W. T. McNeese 50th and Phinney National Garage Tenth Ave. South at King IS SIGN Phone Elliott FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1922. Owl Service Station Fourth Avenue at James Rainier Valley Auto Service Station, Inc. 2001 Rainier Ave. Ravenna Garage (R. L. Lipes and J. Markley) 7012 Woodlawn Ave. Rhoades & Pate (J. R. Dundin) 19th Ave. and Mercer St. Earl Rush 3149 Eastlake Ave. Security Garage Co., Inc. 1319-25 East Madison Shipyard Service Station (A. V. March) 2959 E. Marginal Way Smith Service Station 4072 Rainier Ave. Thirty-Fifth Avenue Garage (Charles Bartlett) 7501 35th Ave. S. W. George Turner & Son Westlake and Aloha Terminal Garage Railroad Avenue at Jackson Union Street Garage (L. B. MeMullen) 2206 E. Union St. ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY Offices, Henry Building, Seattle Plant, 1312 W, Florida (Harbor Island), Phone Main 2453 1240