The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 18, 1922, Page 20

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DRIVE ON 10 END POWERS OF JUSTICES |} _ Planning to Amend) Constitution in) Regard to U. S. Supreme Court BY ©. C, LYON WASHINGTON, Aug. Ih | The movement for a constitu: | tional amendment that will clear | ly and definitely deprive the United States supreme court of | its assumed power declare “unconstitutional” any acts of congress ts assuming very defi- nite shape. ‘The American Federation of Labor fe giving wide circulation to an argn- | Ment on the subject by Chief Justice | Walter Clark, of the supreme court @f North Carolina He points out that the doctrine that the court could nullify laws | * was laid down for the first time | in 1808, when Chief Justice John Marshall, “a bitter personal ene- a decision by the supreme court | that that court could set aside and hold invalid any act of con gress which a majority of that court should at any time held to conflict with the constitu: the United States. ver. been alleged,” Chief | Clark insists, “that there ts a) @ constitution which confers If there controversy. “Indeed, such action is in di- violation of the language of Itution of the United | provides that when a two-thirds vote in each ‘IT SHALL BE- COME A LAW. / “No power more fatal to govern: | ‘Pieht by the people could have been | | devised, for, unlike the president and | ‘the congress, the judges are not elec: | tive, nor are they subject to review the sovereign power, the people, their terms being limited. On the rary, they are appointed to of- and hold for life. For them to te the veto power is to assume ur-/ supremacy in the control of | and so utterly at variance | precedent and without author. | My im tho constitution cannot fail, | sooner or later, to cause serious, if ‘Mot fatal, embarrassment, It did so | fm the Dred Scott case, and it took | four years of war and three consti. | tutional amendments tg cure it. “tt did so when the court re Versed, by a change of one vote, ‘the by which, following | “The government of this country Should be confined to its people, to Be exercived thru thelr duly elected | Fepresentatives, who are the sole| Sitiges of their fidelity to their trust, Subject to review by the people them. _ selves.” { LONDON, Aug. 19.—It ts the am-} Bition of Princess Mary, bride of} Lord Lascelles, to have a full stable | Fiding under her colors within a few years, Paes BLUE MOUSE 735 THEATRE Fea TODAY ONLY HELL’S RIVER” : A Thrilling Story of the | i Canadian Northwest, With EVA NOVAK, WALLACE I BEERY, IRVING CUMMINGS | “MAN FROM ! - IN CAPITAL WEDDING Mrs. Chong Tse Sing BY GENE COHN SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 18.—It has been left for a woman to halt Chinese tong warfgre after all the efforts of police, immigration offi clals and peacemakers had fated And by her action, which sete @ precedent in the Chinatowns of America, Chinese womanhood for the first time haw dared to votce itself in the councils of tongmen Women sought and were rofused & place at the peace council of world nations, but Mrs, Chong Tse Sing has shown what a woman can do. Her hudband had been slain by a highbinder’s bullet. He had been president of the Suey Sings, proudest of the tongs. Under the wellestabitshed wor rules, at least five ordinary lives should be taken to equal the sore. Also, it has been the custom for widows to enjoy such revenge. But not for Mrs. Chong. She looked upon her five fatherless chil. | the plea of all Chinese women in the dren and to her came the cry of }future. | other bereaved mothers. So she Pressed her way Into the war council Only thone versed in Chinese tradi F ights C hinese Tong Wars ‘One of Them Widowed Her | 1 | | | |the annual reunion 10,000 91ST MEN ARE DUE Big Convention Is on for Saturday and Sunday More than 10,000 menbers of tie Joint division are expected to attend of Wild Went fighting which wil) be held in Seattle Satur the famous organization, |day and Sunday. They will march tn a body tn the Americanization parade at 1:30 Sat Sunday to Camp urday ‘a program Includes a vinit quarters of the division, where a ai Lewis, the training vistonal review will be held ‘The battlescarred flags of the di | viston will head the parade, the last time they will be seen tn public be fore being placed in their permanent resting place in a museum. reserve during the St. Mihlet the Sist naw active fighting in the Meune-Argonne sector, in France, and on the YpresLys, in | Belgium, Of the 40,000 men composing the division, 1,702 met death on the field lof battle. Tho Slat established an enviable record, capturing 471 machine guns, 23 artillery pleces and 2,412 prison. ere. Four honor, congressional medals of 140) «distinguished = service er four distinguished toe medals, 168 Delgian and 93 F decorations were awarded men of the Dist division. Little Dannie tion may realize how daring was her step. tong | | | and fight them. | |the women who are abked to pay the [price in bereavement. | wives! In my own grief It haa come to me that my fellow women, againnt | } whom I nurse no grudge, should be} spared, might have proved one of the bitter ent tong ware on the Pa “Tt ts given to men to make wars! Rut in the end it ts| “For however goes the warfare! |there will be fatherless children and | | widows “Do not rob more children and “Instead of revenge let me ark for | ) And it has brought a halt to what! r coat BY FRANK J. TAYLOR NEWARK, N, J., Aug. 18.—Up here in New Jersey they are talk- ing about George L. Record as the man who worked a “political miracle” in five weeks. Five weeks ago, wiseacres were sure that New Jersey was the most conservative and “safe” state in the union, Today “Cir- cus Tent” Record, as his critics like to call him, has changed that. New Jersey is rapidly swing: ing toward Record, with 10 weeks more to go. Record’s showing today in his contest to capture the republican nomination from Senator Frelinghuysen has thoro- ly alarmed the standpat ele. ments in the party. Frelinghuysen is reported to ‘be calling upon the president for aid. purchased an old army truck, a email puchased an otd army truck, a smal! clreus tent, and some benches and went to Record’s “Circus Tent” te now the talk of New Jersey. With his truck he tours the state, setting up his own campaign “hall" wherever he wishes to speak. That this good olf. fashioned “stump speaking” is ting results is indicated by two de velopments First, Record headquarters are flooded with letters asking for in- formation on economic and politi- cal questions, Second, straw votes taken in factories at ran- dom reveal Record the favorite Miracle Ascribed to ' Candidate in Jersey get-| roads, contention. For many years Record | has been the legal adviser of New| Jersey state and city governments in | court cases Involving traction laws. senate if George L. replace Frelinghuysen? he stand-patter and the He says the strike proves his | Just what It would mean to the Record were to Record an coal trust. trust. “He voted to reduce the tax on incomes of over a million per | year. I would vote to increase | them. | “He voted to abolish the excess | profits tax. I would yote to re | store it, | “He voted for the Esch-Cum mine railroad bill, raising rail- I would break up the ia tne was er meaner in cost) Cupid Chases eal Cantonese to the heads of the/ Short Skirts NEW YORK, Aug. 18--The Mapper race is dying out simply because men refuse to marry seantily garted girks In the interest of matrimony the ultimate aim of every girl modern feminity is bundling Up #0 It can again mystify man into « trip to the altar “When girls by self-reveal ment cease to be mysterious, peace! Why should the innocent] men no longer want to marry | sutfer? . them,” Andrew Tridon, famous | “Aa widow of the man whose death French psychologist, said today | you would avenge: as the one most| when asked to analyze the | directly affected, let me plead for the| change of style back to long other women and children.” ckirte, Such, says Mrs. Chong, must be “Creme "Seine they were matrimonielly undesirable and that there are things that attract men far more than semi-nudity “The flapper, therefore, to es cape spinaterhood, is returning to the good old age of feminine mys tery. In the future, something will be left to the imagination.” PERI RORE 5 SR SS ROLE HE’S A DUKE, BUT HE WON'T BE ONE; GIVES TITLE TO HIS SON WASHINGTON, Aug. 18. — Henry B. Pellew, 04, white-hatred and tm frail health, who has be. come Viscount Exmouth thru the death “of @ relative in England. will not return to London to take his place among the peers. The title will be accepted, but because swered that question himself. Said|| tr Nit reare he a tae thee |] States—the land of his adoption. “Frelinghuysen voted to seat || Mitt ne a eee te mew Newberry. I would vote to expel viscount A. Pellew mc |] of New York, will return to Lon je proposes another time |] fon to take charge of the Ex consuming investigation of the mouth estate and upon the death of his father will live in England ag Viscount Exmouth a ne Brazil-Bound Plane Starts Second Lap MANTEO, N. C., Aug. 18.—The giant plane Sampaio Correia, en r from w York to Roi De road rates, I would vote to re | Janeiro ed off on the Peal it. of its Might today. The “He opposed the soldiers’ com. | Manteo for Charleston, 8. C., about 10 o'clock pensation act it “He has no plant to reduce the cost of living. Ihave « plan.” | Frelinghuysen te Old Guard 1 would vote for an More Quake Shocks Are Felt in Calif. | result against} HANFORD, Cal, Aug. 14.—Slig j him, and the swing towards the more | earthquake shocks, which we t | progr © Record, js regarded by|rrom Fresno to Bakersfield at 9:15 [observers as typifying the national | clock iast evening, also gave Han trend 4 what happened firet tr jtrend. And what happened firet in| tog and vicir n tuste of rattling Indiana, where the Newberry-ite Ol4 and Gov. Edwards » distant sec | Guardeman, Senator New was ousted ice for senator. from his seat, then in Pennsylvania | Record’s trump card is government| Iowa and North Dakota, is likely ownership and operation of the rail-|enough to happen here. | | dishes and ck was short and sharp, swaying pictures. 4 but did no damage Your Guests Know Good Tea— Many of them use TREE TEA Exclusively in their own homes. Bromwwell, Miss Mildred Washington, D. C., y Sydney Bailey, D. S. M., R. N., British ashe oh Washington, are to wed this month, | | naval attache at} | neh | Circulation Dept. AY his Strong, Speedy, isc Wheel “It's easy to get subscriptions to Goodman, 154 W. Bist St. won a Dan Patch Coaster.” WILLIAM GOODMAN The Star,” “And you'll be mighty glad you COASTER WAGON Is FREE to You Any Boy or Girl can own one of these dandy Coaster Wagons by securing ten new subscriptions to The Seattle Star. You Don’t Have to Pay One Cent of Money! SOME WAGON Equipped with Koller like an auto. roiiow These Instructions---Get Started Now SEE THE WAGON AT THE STAR OFFICE Here is your opportunity to secure one of these brand-new Coaster Wagons without one cent of expense. All you have to do is to get ten (10) new subscribers for The Seattle Star. You don’t have to collect any money, nor make the delivery of The Star. Just get ten (10) of your friends or neighbors who are not now having The Star delivered to them, to agree to have it delivered by authorized carrier for three (3) months and to pay him fifty (50) cents a month for it, Have subscribers sign subscrip- tion blank printed in this ad. Be sure and get phone numbers when possible, verified at once. so that subscriptions may be Do not wait until you have secured all ten of the subscriptions, but bring or phone subscribers’ names and addresses to The Star as soon as you get them so that delivery can be started at once. Use This Subscription Blank or Call at the Office and Receive a Book TO SUBSCRIBERS I hereby subscribe to The Seattle Star for a period of three months, and thereafter until I order OT same discontinued. I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 50 cents a month. I HAVING THE STAR DELIVERED TO ME. AM Ow =e a = es PHONE NO. a — — = | ‘ 75 ° 10 | Taken by....... THE SEATTLE STAR 7th Ave., Near Union ays William

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