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| SECTION TWO | The Seattle Star PAGES 11 TO 20 {REMARKABLE CAREER OF | 2) YEARS IS REVIEWED Friend of Wrongdoers Survives Long Series of Bitter Attacks DENVER, July 21.1 have just gat two hours in the most remarkable IT don't know what that girl's story was and I don't want to know, She went outside to wait, but we were soon interrupted by “Gwen. dolen,” a bold, handsome, laughing eyed Mapper from the junior high achool class. girls} Aside from an unnecessary Denver county have presented | “Mount of lip rouge and face paint, ves during the past two /She might have been your daughter asking for help and advice for |r mine, and she might have been themselves or punishment for the |&yway, I gucss. But this girl was “in trouble” and her mother ditn't know, because she ‘Was too busy tn club and social up- markadle judge tn this country, Before this ceareyed. mildman- nered little man, 1,200 wayward \ i nel 3 Tw iN lift werk! And so the girl had come hfs to Ben Lindsey for advice or “re: | venge,” I don't know which. ‘ And so they went on—telling their . secrets and getting advice, counsel, J S ff help, help, help—the court of help, ons ta that's what Judge Ben Lindsey's e | court in Denver really is f M Instead of being afraid of the law 0 agazine ming carers | pad og ve dagte saben ag oad Readers of The Star who also pe- told | gard the law as exemplified in the| ruse the pages of the National Picto- | pérson of Judge Ben Lindsey, a8 | ria) Monthly possibly were surprised bench | friend in need, and they come to him to behold their own Avridge Mann— | owt | Vetentarity and gindiy. otherwise W. B. France—in an {Ihus- Some are sent to. the penitentiary | tateq article on “Buccean. The article, written by Avridge Mann himself, is contained in the Au- 2 ected over a t.! er pedeg Fant gust number of the National, From | i aoart Se the Galy court te the coun: | | try which has no costs. Of course, some lawyers don’t. like this and ne winee asked to contribute regularly to has conghba Ayridge Mann, brain child of W.| a4 i i B. France, was born about « year! ago, and mede hid Gebut on the edi. | toral page of The Star. Since that time he has proved immensely popu- lar with the reading public—so much | 0, that he is now appearing daily on | the editorifi! pages of several other | bewspaper. And now Avridge Mann has gained tf mr i Hist i a" i i] i national “Buccess?” queries France, modest- ly. “It's much Ifke a flea—when you go to put your finger on fe tt tent | wy oe all depends on the size of the ‘The Ladder it | i z 7 ri i as the! “The biggest successes I can think of are the bank clerks and saleagtris. | Take the salesgiris. ‘They stand on | their feet all day, showing a lot of | people a lot of stuff that, half the time, they have no intention of buy- ing. They're cheerful, pleasant. | by: 3 ampeccamee eae obliging, and, tho dogtired, don’t | WILLIAM FE. HUMPHREY witi| show it. That's success.” ref bi wie L All of these laws, suggestions and syntema seem highly beneficial to community. sel addreas the Women’s King County ‘ ray ene club at a luncheon at/ RENO, Nev.— Cloudburst carries away 10 miles of state highway be- | tween Tonopah and McKinneys in Ralston valley. | | ‘We were interrupted five times by Persons in trouble. “Katherine” came in to tell of a brutal and drunken mother. She Was accompanied by a probation Officer, a kind-faced woman. Judge Lindsey listened patiently to the Story, then sald: “All right, Kather- ine, we'll see that you are taken 00d care of and sent to school.” Then he gave orders to have the Mother brought in next day. “Lucy,” a handsome girl, earning her own living, altho only 19, came in, her eyes red with weeping. “Who brought you here?” anked the judge. “No one, Mister Lindsey,” she re- ited, “I just came because I believe you can help me, and oh, I'm in fuch trouble. Please don't let this get into the papers or even to my Mother. It would kill her.” | Ue Plymouth Shoe Co, rourtn Ave. During our SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE we have reduced EVERY PAIR of shoes to prices lower than any shoe store in Seattle. | COMPARE THESE PRICES WITH OTHERS Don't be beguiled by the out- side bit wy A appearance. Look oer ee} formula. ergy hg seldom necessary; salts, will find it is not necessary totake minerals, coal tar, never! it every day, nor to feertase the Unlike Dr. Caldwell’s dose, and that it tis pleasant to the Syrup Pepsin is admirable for taste. Bottles can be had at all children, as i is for grown rug stores, and the cost is only . too. Mothers have about a cent a dose. Have no it to children for hesitancy oving it toa Load in ow it arms. It is absolutely saf bination of ian Senna and other laxative herbs with pep- sin Use it yourself and you LADIES’ Brown an* Black Kid and Patent Strap Pumps and Black and Brown Oxfords, merly $3.50 to $8.00— medium and low heels; $5.00 values— $1.00 $2.95 LADIES’ STRAP PUMPS—NOTHING OVER $6.95 MEN’S BROWN and BLACK SHOES. -$3.85, $4.85, $5.85 Formerly $5.00 to $14.00 values, CHILDREN’S White, also REDUCED PRICE Patent and Kid Pumps and BOYS’ red-trimmed suction sole Tennis; first Brown Oxfords. Clearance quality. Sizes 10 to 51%5— $1.00 to $3.45 $1.68 BOYS’ “SCOUTS”—solid leather. Sizes 12 to 5Yz-..cceeeeeceeeeseeees LADIES’ White Reignskin Pumps and High Shoes, for- SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1 JULY 21, shone WOE EERE PE {THOUSANDS TELL SECRETS TO JUDGE BEN LINDSEY q¢——_ ® bunch of easy money, Unlike government fit the public greatest. lof off deponits,” sayn one faction, | really knows. and open,oll fields to promoters.” | tenn, inde Y sonm day Wyoming. Judge Bow Lindosy COURT ROOM However, the Fall faction, having the upper hand, opens up the pub- Hio reserves, anmuring the La Follette Fight Centers on Public Oil Lands WASITINGTOM, July 21—In a] conservation crowa that now is the way, the public off resources are like | time to drive a good deal for th water power, they will not last for-| “When the off is gone, there'll b ever. Tap them, burn them for the enough shale to last for generatior | True, shale gasoline will cost t power they will create and the oil|tiy tell the La Follette gro resources are gone forever. fo the proposition is to #0 con-|as much, but that’s inevitable.” serve and use the of! resources the| The oil in public ownership in en- country now has that they will bene-| timated by the bureau of mires to | be 700,000,000 barreln “Lat the solid old law of supply | it is guessed that there are 25,000,000 land demand govern the development | more barrels in Alaska, But nobody No wells have been headed by Secretary Fall, “drive the | drilled up there as yet, and there best deal ponsible for the government | may be more and there may be | “Do that and we'll have no off in| Until recently the government had & generation,” replies the opposition, | three public oll reserves—popularly | headed by Senator Robert M. La Fol-| known as “the naval oll reserver.” lette, “let's net aside public reserves | Two were in California, approximate-jcan't be drained,” asserts the La and nave the oil, We'll need it badly | ty 40,000 acres. The third was in| Follette followers, “It can, too,” ree ‘Those in California were leaned be} So that’s that. The petroleum rev cause private concerns on adjoining’ serves are gone, or are as good aw lands were beri 9. </ Goyerneniet re. gone, so far as hee: are concerned, F ruit Periodicals 3 Fe Are Consolidated ~~ Northwest Fruit Grower, a month= ly magazine devoted chiefly te the apple industry of the state, former+ ly published for several years and@ owned by the Skookum Packers’ ase | sociation, has been purchased by stern Fruit, and with the June nue is merged with the latter publl- cation. Western Fruit ts devoted to small fruite, including berries, as well as to the apple industry of the Northe west, The merging of these oun | publications makes Western the only exclusive fruit cublentiell [in this state. tinnmciceencoeneaneatants serves via underground seepage, Just this spring, for similar reasons, and the additional one that Secre tary of the Navy Denby now says |he prefers to have its ofl stored im tanks at the sea coasta, the Wyom ing reserve was leased, “Teapot Dome (wyoming reserve) tort the Fallites, FAHEY-BROCKMAN are not price jugglers. We play square with everybody. .No man gets more for his money than another at any F-B store. Marking the goods high enough at the start of, a season to cover a mark-down later on doesn’t sound “on the level” to us. Other merchants may think differently. That’s their privilege. But we look at it this way— Adding 25% to the actual price of clothes in April is not square to the man who buys early— Cutting 25% off the marked-up price in July on shop- worn, Sotcked clothing is only “kidding” the late buyer— As a matter of fact “Left-Overs” are too costly at almost any price. FAHEY-BROCKMAN Clothes are Better Clothes plainly marked at a price that competition cannot touch. Right now we are offering thousands of new garments of finest materials and best workmanship, with style built in to stay, at $25—averaging a saving of $10 or more over any “sale” values in the city. And mark this! * & & Inspect the Fahey-Brockman $25 line of summer tweeds direct from Eastern Fash- ion Centers. There’s a flare of style about them—a cool comfort and swagger that cannot be matched. “Jahe Brockman’ 2 Famous TwentyFives Smash Sales Values Yes Sir!—Fahey-Brockman $25 Clothes average higher values than any sales values offered at any place or time. Quantity Buying—Quick Turnover—Great Volume combine to always insure F-B Customers Quality Clothes— snappy, new and desirable clothes—at lowest possible price. We guarantee quality. workmanship. We guarantee style. We guarantee absolute satisfac- tion. All F-B Clothes are sold under our iron-clad money-back guar- antee. And you are the judge of what absolute satisfaction means. We guarantee