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fur ¢ montha, or $9.00 per pean, palatial community hotel begins today. nent of community hotels. efit by their presence. mpaig md a whole week on the job? The Seattle Star 2 mentna, $1.00; 6 montha, 65.15) yoan Cuntde of the state, O00 per ment, By carrier, oity, ® month. NOW—THE HOTEL! The campaign to raise $2,700,000 for the immediate erection of There is every reason why it should succeed. Seattle’s prosper- ty demands such an institution. Private enterprise in all but the gest of the world’s cities is loath to undertake the establish- Hence the need for erecting them as vic institutions by the united push of all the people who are to The Star heartily indorses the hotel plan, is itself buying a 5,000 block of stock and bonds and urges upon any of its readers tho are able to help in a similar way that they subscribe. This should be done promptly. There is no reason why the should not be completed by Wednesday night. Why THE Editor The #tar: As the mother of one of the victims of our recent insane Fourth, may I be permitted to make a plea thru your paper? Recently you published a letter tn which the blame for our frensied ex- hibition of patriotiem () wae par-| tally at least placed on the shoulders of elty and estate officials for having Permitted such « celebration to take Place, True, of course, as far aa that fon, but public officials usually car ry out the will of the people who elected them. Who aided and abetted and fostered this return to savagery? Who but the Amertoan Legion, the makers of high explosives to be put into the hands of little children and at least one newspaper in Beattie? And back of these--who for sordid ‘Rain would risk the matming of tnno- cont little ones—are the millions of us—all of us who for years have al: lowed thts thing to go on year after year and year after year in the mis taken idea that we were fittingly | celebrating the birth of our nation, | when as @ matter of fact the true mignificance of the day was more! than often completely forgotten tn | the din and notes and confusion. | Why have we been so bind? Must death come tnto our very home be | i FER 2 g re ! What of the nights! i Henry Ford docan't be we in borrowing. The Ford Moter Co. originally ‘eapliaied at $100,000, only An Ounce of ut $28,000 of this was sub- ied in cash. “Law and order must be pre was the only money that wea, property and life must be went into Ford's business i rosected, transportation of the the outside. Additions to the ait, must not be interfered with capital have been cre 44 interstate commerce must iby the Ford business—takea not be interrupted.” ‘profits. wae Thus Attorney Gegeral Daugt yeare ago, Edsel erty, speaking for tile federal gov- ao ernment, justifies the mobilization ‘They hed 41% per ef troops to handle the railroad for which Ed seas, mone, So far, v0 good. Life and prop ee erty should be protected, if It ‘takes the whole United States Savestinant “et army to do it. But the troops : are called out on behalf of the decided public, and ne one else, They are not the agents of the rail- i roads, to be used as @ weapon for crushing the raflway shepmen's almost unions, 38 te fast ae mech their bust ness te protect unien men from el | ae It te to protect neostriking am heed ployes from lawless mabe bent en wae en worse vielence, basi. It cold — Disorders have already eccurred, and 30 cents © ‘Traine have been held up and fa the same Yer. bombarded. Sheps and homes of refined ofl products hove been dynamited and burned. correspendingty. Men have been kidnafitd and big job was t© beaten. ‘This in s fow scattered of industry—tes® — iocaiities where the forces of aw and prices, He sod order have broken down. thra the organization — ynto this situation the attorney up. Bat in these early conceal orders troopers, They there were not enough prof 04, be » force for peace of they supply the gigantic capital 64. become the firebrand that will Stanters 08. set off che of the nastiest Inbor- borrowed heavily. capital confiagrations this country fo. And the ones from nag ever seen. Now is the time borrowed made mo mis- toe sir, Daugherty and other fed- ali? pat “aw dae consequences. An ounce to make money. Tt ls com tion today ts worth = ton of It a wih Vere siviiag month from now. going Into debt, Rocke- advising borrowing. Back YAKIMA, July 18—Mavor R. De Average Man: sorely . ation ne eutand-dried role Train “geaitie ond Tacoma wealth. A meth while recovering.-News item, sgn Books 1950 ot a man will have te de adheres —_ My Aor Mmself a4 @ woman wil be to get a shave. Nor have any two One thing funnter than @ coun- {ho samme octution. try fellow in town ts @ city fellow us are imitators. We ‘® ‘4 count Young millionaire whe says he leads @ dog's Ufe may mean lap dog. The ex-katser’s book promises to de among the sa worst ameliers. Late of these Blooming straw hats have gone to seed already. “Oan the flapper make her asks @ professor, She have to make tt. Bhe has it. The Mt. Everest climbers ought Our ambition ts to be 80 rich that = to try some filvver glands. when we go broke we can call it Fe RE financia! y embarrassed, 5 Dutch girls dress Uke their _ Mothers; but tt 1s just the other | way around in America. Only #2 more shopping months until Ohriatmaa. Bome dull people wear smart clothes. | APetter from | AWVRIDGE MANN. Dear Folks: When summer epeaks, with subtle art, the words “vacation days,” and sunny skies seduce the soul to ait around and laze; my recollection wanders back to scenes I used to know, and brings to mind vacation in the Land of Long Ago. Across my mental vision come the things I saw and 4id, in happy, sunny, summer daye when I was just kid; the streets und lanes I used to know, the woods I used to roam, way back across the country in my distant ¢hildhood home. I see again the big red barns, their lofts so full of hay—e dandy Place for hide-and-seek on any rainy day; or, seated in the buggy, while the storm pursued its course, I'd drive around the world with my Imaginary horse. I eee the old Atlantic, with tts shore of mand and dune, where children loved to clamber and the lovers loved to spoon; the land that meets the vision of my retrospective eye, goes on and on forever, till it merges with the nky. Three thousand miles away, they are, and many years between; I wonder, i» it really true—their mystic, magic sheen? Or waa tt Just the eye of youth that put the glamor there, and filled its fields and seas and skies with castlesin-the-air? (Three days to write @ “Letter from Avridge Mann” for me ae Most of these men longin would cut their heads off with a straight razor. “People get better every day,” says a preacher. Throwing cold water gets a man into hot water. Discretion Now, Or— of the Ferries | amount to about 16 per cent of the that « for the olden days fore we realize the folly of it all? You cannot argue that parents should use care tn permitting chil | dren to have fireworks, For three | years we have not atven our children one penny to spend for theese things, but we were to auffer the loss of our | Uttle Olive-—-our Peqo'-My Teart, ae we called her—despite our preeav- tions, When children are with others they want to play a# the others do and you cannot keep them The Passing Editor The Star: According to data complied by the, foremost educational experts tn the United States, Seattle teachers) (From the Walla Walla Union) The lettthg of « contract at tion’ of » bridge across the Snake | never have been paid the prapor: | river at Central Ferry firss | tion of morey set aside for schoo! step the welding bogie! fast | Purposes to which they are en tidied. & P. Cubberly of Leland| link tn the Inland Empire high | gtantord University, and other lead: | — ing educators, are agreed that tn) any school eystem teachers’ salaries | rie terms “go adlpe ope should consume at least 66 per cent st ce pete! of the contract, © of school expenditures, Balaries of motorist can traverse the state of | inchers in Beattie have never to Washington from Spokane to Se | taied 64 per cent of school expendi. attle or or go to Portland |tures—at least teachers have not from te | deen paid that proportion since tty, t all im the either watt for or pay toll to a | \ti0. ond, powmitiy, not a ferry, 16 will bo @ great step in In Chicago tn 1921, 69.6 per cent} advance. af the school appropriations went to/ the teachers, and yet, on June 36,/ last, the board of education in that city increased the minimum ealary | CEARN A WORD] Sue ea saa EVERY DAY __ || 1 msztoum catary trom 1,100 to 7 Money Paid to the Teachers SEATTLE STAR Frenzied Exhibition of Patriotism from the danger and menace of the deadly things no matter how much you might try, Could you have seen for even one tiny moment the terri bly burned body of our baby—the skin hanging in shreds and the charred flesh aorone her little back, you would be no bitterly eppored to thie awful thing that your paper |would fight with the strong weapon of publicity until a really sane Fourth would become an actuality. Other states do not permit the sale of fireworks, even of the socalled harmieas kind. Our little giri's death wan due to « Indy-finger, the tiniest and most barmiess looking of all fire- crackers. If the ministers in their pulpita, the newupapers thruout the state and the women’s clubs would give this thing even « little thought and publicity the state of Washing- |ton would soon relegate this horror of nolee and danger to the Dark Ages, where It belongs, The voters thru thelr representatives will see to that. Gladly would I speak before the wornen’s clubs-—any organization, In fact-—tf by so doing 1 could ald tn oetablishing this thing. Our baby t* fone, nothing can call her back, but her going. wou!4 not be In vain could ft eave other little ones from a simi- lar fate, You have already written stirring editorials and articles. Don't stop now and let people formet. Let us kill for al! time this thing that has for so long been paraded under the gulse of patriotiem. Just tell the people of this etate In round figu what ft has meant-—drive home the facts and you can trust them te act Very tincerety, MRA O, & LARSON. $2,800; and increased the salaries of principa: 600 and $600 «@ year, Below are shown the proportion of neneol moneys received by Beat tle teachers year by year, beginning with the year 1910. These facts are |taken from the financtal reports of the Seattle echool dist t%} «1918-18. 4 1” ences PBs os OOP Eaeentially, the foregoing means that for the past 13 yeare the tenchers ef Beattie have at no time been pald the whge that the best educational thought fs the country consider their due. These facts are sufficient to re fute the claims made tn board nieet tinge and elsewhere recently, that teachers’ salaries absorb from 80 to © per cent of echool expenditures. aude tm teachers’ salaries such fteme an janitor’ wages, books, pa pera, and other supplies. WILBUR WINTHROP, Editor The Star: ‘With all sincerity I heartily agree with L. M. Clarke and the young man regarding the lack of @ suitable con- venionce where the young people of the ofty could make each other's ao quaintance, Those who have the security ané | soctal atmomphere of a home, perhaps meaning everywhere (from bl. |Snitvened with Interested members ot | 5 a family of both sexes, do not real-| It's used Ike this: “Excape was {re the vital need which faces a com-| Bome might suggest the }churches a# & medium; others the Hodges; others the societies, but tn | Exports from the United Staten each instance let tt be understood cent falling on the second sytiable The u ag the w in unite; all the other vowels are short. Tt meane—presence tn more than one piace, or in an Indefinite number = meg nation’s total production, Bringing the Young Folks Together the real social tnterest tm any of these, Many attend church, but frankly 40 not enjoy the eocial con- nections, maintaining that too few other young people mingle Many Pleasing persons do mot care for lodge work of any kind, and the rou- tine bores them. Plenty of pleasure loving, clean minded young men and women Gisitke cards, and as Mr Clarke relates, too many of the only methods of today require more money for dues, spectal clothing, etc., than many can possibly afford. I perronally know at least 15 wom. | @n, unmarried, ranging between the ages of 20 and 40, good looking, agreeable company, dreasing well Are you a “high pressure"man ? Men of high nervous energy—rapid thinking, ective, dynemic, and men often described os having “no nerves” less rapid, but not less sure in thought and ection, usually have dif. ferent tastes in cigars. Mozart cigar is made especially for men of the first type. Such men asually find that “mild” tobaccos give them greatest enjoyment end no sensation of over emoking, just es moderation in meat eating brings them the best results, Mozart with its truly mild Havana fre. grance is edmirably suited to the ener getic man—to the man who works at high pressure. We invite him to try JMozarts for a week—end watch. Mosart Cigar t made by Cossolideted lear Corporedem, New York Deertured bp Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc, Seattle, Wash. 0 ond Ped 2 for 25¢ Kings 2 for 25¢ UVatversats HETERODYNE — Production Fase) LETTERS ELDITOR | rn receiving clrouit, of nearly the same frequency aa that of the waves which are being received. The com bined action of both these frequen. cles causes an audible beat tn the telephone receivers, Signals are heard during the production of these beats, ———eeeestneneeninneegienpecennnenton who constantly tament this very mame lack of social service. They en Joy munia, dancing (under good pro- Vision), the movies, all out door sporte of the inexpensive vartety, and each and everyone of them would lghty good “pal” for mowt diy youn They are aa they each earn & good salary, but they would honestly like to have the companion ship of some congenial person of the opposite wex, which is the birthright of every normal human being, None of these giris would ever re sort to the cheapening street flirt. ona; to any public dances, cafe life or tawdry pickup sequaintances. Some of them live in hotels, apart- mente or with families, but in each case they could occasionally offer « bit of home entertainment as @ é\ verison, It im the lack pf opportunity to meet the right kinds of men and boys, and it ls really pitiful at times. I have too, heard these «ame sen. Uments expreaned by young men, but not #0 often. acquaintance te not so extensive. Surely there #hould be a movement aity, women socept invitations of which know, too, that tragedies could often have been averted if boys and girlie in the working, nomadic class, could be brought together under proper conditions, without undue, frighten. ine restrictions of youth's indul- pence tn normal, clean pleasures, This ts = great big city need and The Way the Party Bosses Work |government of the South district, | - severance tte A correspondent, in a letter ap-!and that thru men whom he places|{. every p+ eee a | pearing yenterday in The Star, deals tn the legislature he participates in with political bossiam and machine | «tate legislation. Bominations In the South district of | | King county. John Wooding te rep- no part of the political equip. resented as the boss who potnts out at sd mgidivgibe sae eennene to the candidates who are to be nomin- | ated, and the republican machine 1s | ;, of personal and extra-legal wald to get behind the favored ones pony @ new discovery. It ee and to see that their names #0 OD jong existed in Western nations and the November ticket. Mr. Wooding | perhaps {a coeval with organized | te alleged to be a magician who, bY | noclety. legerdemain, charms, spelie and tm | tical, matter-of-fact men. They un- cantations, is able to overcome Op-| derstand the realities of life and position and to elevate hig yamals | properly appraise the impotence of to ponttions of trust, honor and the unorganized mass of citizens. | They simply take advantage of the Altho he holds no offies under the indifference of citizens to their polit- conaUtution and statutes of the ical | Editor The Star: emolument. ot | undamped electric onciilations in the | Possibly because my | soon to provide for this great neces: | I know that many girls and! they 40 not exactly approve, just in| sheer desperation at joniineas; and I) But necromancy an4 mysticism is modus operand!; nor is his sys- MONDAY, JULY 17, 1922, (Robert Moran's famous home near East Sound, Orcas Island) The wand of Manhattan touched the wildernces And now, like a desert oasis, Rosario stande Within the shadow of a mighty hill that rears Protecting arms about its house and lands. Among the rugged trees that God has builded Rosario, with ite garden roses and lagoons, Owns nurtured beauty fairer than fair streets Without their rush of trade in noisy nvons, Some new Aladdin, with his lamp, Has surely worked his art within these doors; For Wonder walke about each cherished room And holds the key to ali these treasure stores, But down the bay, when hidden by the trees, There is no spell for this fair place to will; And all its burnished gold is but as dross When lost within the shadow of a hill. 16 Hoge Building. Now, of course, men of this man- Political bommes are prac duties and obligations, By state, there appears to be some truth months of anticipation the boss| gone and their reign at an end. in the frequent assertion that John | atiently prepares for a primary or Wooding the major factor in the political campaign. His following ts 1 Fillat the Red Crown sign at Service Stations, garages, and other dealera,