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| EVEN DEAD IN WEW YORK FIRE| SANE VIEWS lis ‘| STARTS ON PAGE ONE House Scene of |governing people. Horror Tt is altogether likely that our na a thon may ere long be called upon to WORK, Sept. 90.—wi [make momentous decisions as to ite SOW jon eoures ta this new intertiational | lead, several more | uoneaval; so all our traditional others suffering qualities of hard-headedness will be and broken bones, needled. | ruins of an uptown | Right here enters the question of House were searched {the newspaper's duty aa a purveyor TOF additional victims of and interpreter of events, Without dias and without passion, the press “which swept thru it midnight. |should present the facts tn the case, the dead were: jin full proportion and tn due rela jtton to history and te other world | i, 18; Henry Hoff, sffairs. Moff, 21; Flora Hoff, 18 SUBTLE PROPAGANDA pn, 45; Wilburn Fenn, AGENTS AT WORK Smldentified child. Quick and powerful and subtle! rt: ond scenes were wit agencies are at work to pervert the fas the flames roared thra the | public viston tnto seeing only on: o1 iment building, which aide and getting only partial facts. families. The building) No sensible editor can overlook MOH st. near Broadway. ithe tot that there are several Was turned in by @ police groups of propagandists diligently loperating to color the news from out jin — ae Asia Minor according to their own ieee Secapes became rot. interests. Hee and smoke poured from all) One or two Mlustrations from late | we Gnd above the roar of th¢ | dispatches will make clear this Gangor of apparatus OS®) Koint, Athens reported 120,000 Chris. Of the Crensied tenants |tiang massacred in Smyroa, That| ‘ arery window lstatement naturaity got inte the| ® crowd watched, a middie yp ocgiines. and America gasped with siad in her night Gown. Horror, In the Nght of the con from a window to the of the public with | At jater a baby hit | stent expertence of the public with |Athens since the war, this news) beyond her, Its mother snout be accepted with reserva: | Ht to save it frome Wore tions atiho tt has neither been 4 _—. nied or corroborated. Every atten: tive reader of forelgn cablegrama knows that a close end rather reck-| [less censorship ts maintained at the ‘Greek capttal. It suppresses and | colors news according to the inter: jest of the government. Greece sim | iply does not comprehend the west ethan tts arcseeon ern viewpoint of “the truth, the ecape, and there died an| Whole turth and nothing but the/ thru the window. His truth.” sti was on the fire WAIT FOR NEWS FROM AMERIC. REPORTERS geen standing on a win-| So we should await expitctt sub | the flare getting bright. /atantiations from official American Dehind him. He wait.|soarees of the dreadful details of ‘ea he could, then, as a the burnings and massacres at | the crowd, he plunged Smyrna. We do not know yet who he fifth story, and was Instant. started the fires and who did the| 4 Firemen put ladders Killing. Already it ts clear, from the Dullding with the ald of | silence of Sytmrna dispatehes on the ‘and fm this manner|point, that the wild tale from | carry down many who} Athens was not true. Admiral Bris- | have perished, The|tol, who is a genius at getting to those carried to safe.| the bottom of things in Turkey, will dering. and seven were| tell Washington the truth tn duc | ‘so terribly burned tt ts/ time. cannot survive. Not that the Turks are incapable ‘the firemen who engaged |°f massacre on so vart a scale, The Work succumbed to the | Whole world knows better. Savera ‘were taken to hoapitals |‘!mes 150.000 Christiane were done | hands and faces. to death by the Turks In the recent | from five hospitals|Armenian mersacres and deporta-| ite carry the injured, and| tions. ‘The bicody Turk ts a pant) from three atations|™master at the trade of killing non-| the throngs, Surgeons | Mostem subjects and neighbors. His | established record makes him rightly a stapect | | stations on the sidewalk, |!9 moy case ‘ertheless, Americans | Injuries of the victims | want to give even the devil his due; | for as rapidly as they |% they desire the ascertained facts before they balieve any of the loose | ly-flung atrocity charges. American editors con scarcely es cape taking the position that their public demands American news from American sources. War experience bas shown = that foreign news | agenctes and foreign oFrespond. ents cannot avold news coloration. We hare had overmuch experience of American papers carrying as pews, or “special correspondence.” tance of the invitation|the raw and tunconcealed propa- & preliminary peace parley | «anda of foreign nations. The onty news upon which America can sure ly depend ts that which te written by the typewriters of American cor. ee ee caste ana | respondents or officials actually over to the Turks. apen the sctae, thie deinané, -‘Kewe! As full experience under many and varied teste has proved, the to @ greater degree the! American newspaper man may be situation, In the al-| trusted to tell the truth, fully and Proposal dispatched 4 reariessty, about nations, causes and Egy yreng—hewne events. He may sometimes be tn adequately informed, or tack background of sufficient prepara on, so that his dispatches are not always well proportioned. But he is not venal; there are no strings to him.’ He plays no favo- rites in the news. His ingrained sense of fairness makes him the world's most efficient purveyor of news. Shrine Circus Opens Tonight Opening of the Arena doorn for the Shrine circus to be given by the HERE’S MORE ABOUT wees on Oe ae | | ) sen and firemen swarmed on ladders and risked | ‘again and again to bring | PRople to safety, while the powd massed below watched pal life drama and cheered ex née of | | } ) ‘was hostile in tone also | the Turkish nationalist | has been asked for an exten- Seatth pty time, no word was forthoom: | Gundeyy neat Octo ath ee was pointed out that it would as . . been set for 7 p. m. Saturday. ble feat to evacuate all in the short time al-| ‘by Kemal. The Shriners wil parade at 6:15 Saturday afternoon 4 to advertise the circus. The va cone vay of wget gg fe rious uniformed bodies will march Pe ge ara Bouilton, | costume, together with the divan “envoy, who Is now in confer.|°C, Nile Temple. Kemal, would induce him}. T* circus program witt begin at 7:20 on a large stage that has been built at the Arena, The entertain ment will be furnished by profes sional performers, tocluding | Mayer Diving Beautte Saxophone Queens” from Chi the five Sarnellas, Morey ; “Dainty Viola, Emma Drel Berkowitz, was burned to|!% 0M the Spanish Web, the Kre i & fire which destroyed their |¢" Woman Iron Jaw end sinck| miles west of Olympia)? ®¢t: the Juventie Alvards, con fore noon yesterday. Tha|tTtionists and tumblers asleep on the 4 floo: The show will last approximately burned to death in her bed, |W hours, after which an 11-piece falling thru to the ground Orchestra will furnish the music for the bed when the second |‘ancing, which will be free. d. Mrs. Berkowitz was| The first count will be made Sat- clothes outside the house urday night In the young women's fire broke out. It spread and babies’ contents All candi thru the whole house, mak. dates having 100 votes will receive impossible, The loss ts es-|1,000 free votes ‘at $5,000. The cause of the} - i C. P. Steamer Is I unknown. a1) Ashore in Fundy) give a street | “Lottie| “The Car. Open Labor HERE’S MORE ABOUT STRAUS STARTS ON PAGE ONE || iin asnieaaaliaesiiiaitanensill: ONE--Turkey, Russia and Ger: | many, with one or more of the Hal: | kan states, may pool thelr forces) amainat the allted powers, / TWO—The United State enlightened self-interest, compelled to take a part In prevent ing a world conflagration and in re storing peace. THREE-—A genera! conflagration can be avolded only If (a) Great Brit ain, France and Italy reach an im mediate agreement, and (b) If the treaty of Versailles be materially re vised FOUR—The present menacing conditions would not have developed had “the United States, under any reservations we chose to make, joined the league of nation FIVE—Ventscion Greek premier exiled at return of Constantine, “should be immediately recalled and placed In power do not wish to be a prophet of for tts may be evil,” said the former ambassador, “put the danger of an outbreak of the world war ty great. I say great be cause the present state of affairs may bring Germany, Russia, Turkey and one or more of the Balkan atates | together tn close alliance, | GERMANY HAS NOTHING TO LOSE ' “The militartet and monarchieal | parties In Germany have nothing te | lose and everything to gain, in their estimation, by joining with Russia and Turkey. Furthermore, the Rus stan soviet system, would be Immeas. urably advanced by auch an aliiance. | “Today, Runvla has in readiness the greatest army in the world. That army, organized and led by German officers, can be enlarged to any ex: | tent | “With the world exhausted as tt ta, | bleeding at every wound, another THE SEATTLE STAR CITY TAX LEVY | HERE’S MORE ABOUT UP HALF AMILL| MUTT PARADE \| STARTS ON PAGE ONE touch of the coamopolitan to the va Assomblage that the kiddies and 4 jcould never have achieved alone. Ro many movie pho aphers and amateur “snapshooters” packed the intersection of Third ave, and Virginia st, that the head of the column had difficulty In starting Careful and Raise Comes Despite Half Million Cut in Budgets Despite ® paring of $576,045 from the estimated expenditures of city departments, the elty tax levy will bo raised half o reaching the figure of 2 Levies to be made for each depart. cleverly ment follows General fund, $4,611,970.67; Inter. | were eprinkled thru the long car est, redemption and sinking, $93) van Povery dog in the line, accor 467.85; library, 46.37 ing to his respective master, was th a 748.87. ity ty perfect yuby of “Trownle, firemen's relief and pension, § Total tw $6,129,998.16 In some nections of the effy levy will be slightly higher th others, due to Indebtedness of Century nedy bull pup, and « ea: didate for the two prizes offered b the Columbia theater for the do t resembling “Brownte.” judges, Maj, M, I the nin me quarters, but the 26.8 estimate ts an Capt. I. MH. Smith and Lioyd Spencer, ry aver were complacently happy when the Decrease of $12,209,018 In annesned first of the contestants for prisew conceived plans for prizewinning combinations the |unions in an educational cam Andruss, UNIONS NOT FUND AGENTS Labor unions have not been au |thorized to act am collection agencies in the Community Fund campaign, {tt declared Saturday by the |heads of the industrial division of |the eampatgn This statement was called forth as the result of reports made by solicit ors that a number of union men, lwhen approached for #ubseriptions, anwerted that they would make thelr Gonations thru thelr union. nt | | that f w the unions not collecting in the oamp=gn,” gaid Willa 4d, viee-commander of the in “The speakers for li dustrial division ne our division are appearing before the a a. 6 mo jonly. The wageworkers are hed yy |to make their subscriptions thru og |their plant captain, to the solicitor | who covers ¢ erritory where they lwork or to the campaign représenta |tive who visits thetr homes.” GIVE PROGRAM valuation, as reported by County As (flocked to the point of rendezvous, sensor Frank W. Hull, increased the but when all of those eligibte for the levy slightly, as the counct) had fig- (numerous prises——for the most AT FIRLANDS ured on a basie of $10,000,000 reduc: comically dressed youngster, the ton argost pet, girl with amallest pet,| yor the enjoyment of patients at By « heavy majority, the councll. best pet in cage, best decorated Cart. witeands sanitanum, an borate men refused to sanction proposed the homellest utt, most freckled salary cute. boy, ete., eto, and so forth and ao on |Prosrem of music, veudevilie and SAYS MASSACRE IS TURKISH FEAR pansed tn review, rassed beyond moans they looked hi completion of the march, which pr ereded down Virginia st ave. thence to Yesler way. to Secor and bac on Second to the atarting point. Bo the honorable judges had to work | rapidiy PARIS, Sept. 90.-—The Kemalist! 1: ig some task to count af the must occupy Thrace immediately, to | re-cien on the fares Of serert hin ka Fld hen Cnn tenes dred amall boys while they are walk. | ing over that route! sentative here, stated today. . Ferld Bey gay ee for the occupation of MEDFORD, Ore—Ten inches one of the straits by the legions of |*now in two days force closing I'rines were to be awarded at the jot en tapha Kemal MM rater Lake Lodge, after exceptio war carries with It the possibilities) rhe new Greek government hes fieas woes in the dixorgantea| stated that its sole object te to de: | Yon % may bring within the allied | fend Thrace,” said the Turkish repre y busy tourtet season nations themselves.” Straus discussed the causes of the| Present situation. | “For the past 100 yeare the East ern question has menaced the peace of Europe, not because of the domi. | nant power of Turkey, but Because | of the jealousy and the antagonistic interests of European powers In re spect to Turkey.” The diplgmacy of the Turk has been to take advantage of this an tagonism. The present situation has devel oped because Turkey took advantage | of the jealousy between Great B ain, Itaty and France. ALLIES SHOULD ACT IN UNISON “A pew world conflagration may ensue unless Great Britain, Italy and France come promptly to accord. It was thelr failure to act In concert that caused the present situation to develop. “Had the United States Joined the league of nations, the dominant mor al prestige of our country could have prevented the disagreement between the sities and brought sbeut an Agreement im regard to Turkey ‘Then Greece would uot have dared to begin the war, “But Greree ts immedistely re- sponsible for the present condition During the war that netion was un dor the leadership of Venizelos, who proved himself one of the foremost statesmen of the allied powers. Af ter deserving #9 well of his country he was deposed and made an exile “Hed he been at the head of af tales, Greece would not be tn the plight she i* in today, To escape from this plight, te avoid another world war, 1 would emphastse the necessity of these steps: (1) there Mast be immediate agreement be tween the aliled powers—Great Brit. | ain, Francs, Italy and others; and (2 | Veniaelos should be recalled imtnedt. | ately and placed tn power of Greece “And furthermore, if we are going to avoid another war, the Versailles treaty will have to be materially re vised. This revision is posstble only If the allied powers come to prompt agreement. Only a solid diplomatic front on the part of the allies can bring Kemal and bis foros to terms “It te a world calamity that we have not cooperated with the allies by joining the league of nations. AMERICA MAY BE FORCED IN “Had we joined, the present situa. tion, I believe, would not have arts. on. As things now stand, ft Is with. | in the realm of probability that for| enlightened self-interest we may be compelled to take a part in prevent ing & world conflagration and in re. storing peace. “And all this menacing condition finds ite cause now, as in the past, in the opportunity given to the Turks by the mutual jealousy of| those who opposed them. The pres | ent lack of concord between Great Britain, France and Italy emphasizes | the fact that the treaty of Versailles | was in many respects unwise and| was stimulated by a spirit of revenge rather than by that of calm and for. wardlooking statesmanahip.” HERE’S MORE ABOUT SIMMS =| STARTS ON PAGE ONE |} | early youth of the republic the Mo hammedans of Algiers were taught | la historic lesson by America’s little navy. Since then America has; risen to second naval rank in the world and once more offers protec- tion to civilization against the ruth less disciples of the Koran. Despite the announcement that these de-| stroyers have been dispatched on/ an errand of mercy only, behind the act is the gentle hint that some: where there are limits beyond which the forces of evil in the Near Fast |ritory outrig! EDITOR; JUDGE Time to" orgunies their detensee, | (T HAPPENED NOT TO Therefore, we demand the evacua BE ARM OF THE LAW tion of Thrace end Constantinople. and Immediate cession to our govern ment, “By ocoupation of the Asiatic side “Bay,” queried the petutent stranger, pointing to @ long wood en arm extending Into the court w the County City bullding we are try! t laim what aT t - mia wetetong When are they going to hang Ferid Bey stated that the atied || 1! Mahoney? I've been waiting 4 here all mm * replied the newsy, “That ain't no scaffold. That's Matt Starwich's wirelone waiting to butt in on some mes sage between bootieggers.”* ping.” note, which set forth the Near East rt house peace proposals, only spoke of sup. porting Turkey's claims. | “The allies did not gtve ue the ter. | * he sald wish to have guarantees in our hands, an) We are not assured of the good faith | of the British.” GROW HOSTILE | DES MOINES, Iowa, Sept. 20.- Austin Haines, editr of the Des| Motnea News, was fined one dollar and wentenced to one day In jail for Haines was cited for contempt eev. eral weeks ago ae the reeult of an) editorial published inst June In which | he criticised the phraseology of Judge Hume's decisions. In the editorial Haines declared) that the opinions of Judge Hume reminded him of the “labored ef. forts of ® village smart aleck.” He accused the Judge of being “intoxi cated by the exuberance of Kis own verbosity.” Haines’ attorney was granted 10 @ays tn which to prepare an ap-| Peal. | The defense argued that Hanes’ ticle €id not criticise the legal) merits of Judge Hume's decisions nor his methods in arriving at them, but merely the language used, | “There are limits, even tn Amert.| ca, beyond which newspaper editors! Are not allowed to go.” Judge Hume At Geclared in his decision finding Haines gufity. | Citing «his expertences = with) skunks and newspaper editors, the Judge declared he had the impres. sion that the former are as " roses and Chevalier Bayards” comparison with the latter. The opinion to which Haines made particular reference was in & case Involving repeal of a street, car ordinance and substitution of another, | | Bigger Cargo Than Vessel Could Take It's the same girland the same Nearly 1,000 tons of cargo was left behind when the steamship Jefferson sailed Saturday for the Orient. Her holds were crowded to capacity. The cargo the was forced to leave will be taken either by the President Madi son or the Wheatland Montana. FR 50c Lecturer ‘to Talk at Cornish School Prof. S. L, Joshi, exchange protes. sor from India under the Carnegie Foundation, will lecture at the Cor nish school on Monday ‘ening, on Soul of Hindu Art, dealing the architecture, sculpture, Fifty | with painting and music of India. cents admission is to be che Council Will Buy Cemetery Tract A mmall tract of land adjoining the G. A. R. cemetery, north of Volun teer park, will be purchased by the city, it wan decided at the Friday = council meeting, to be used as a mo mortal cemote: has begun to show its moral cour: age, and moral courage consistently Big Circus Acts Dancing, Etc. motion pictures was # od at the Inatitution Friday night by entertain ers who volunteered for the occaston. ‘air wan under the auspices of flo Telephone & Telegraph nd i the perfotmers were Thom las L. Drow, singer and Impersonator; [Mins Anne Little, singer, and Gerda von Sanden, dancer, The orchestra } composed of Olga Reinsdortt, Hyacinth Fourmont, Velarie Gtard, adine Gillen, Evelyn Smith, Eva aliquist, Sigrid Caristen, violinists; |} Beulah Nims. lo; Bonnte Brown, of |naxophone; E Anderson, drums of |Ruth Treletad and Gertrude Kelley uw jmotion ploture machine a- | pianinte. Bird operated tho H. C. Dye Held for Theft of $6,000 M. ©. Dre, 84, wae held tn the city jail Saturday, in connection with the theft of $4,000 from +the Wallace Equipment Co. Charges were being prepared by detectives from the Burne agency, accusing Dye of the theft. Dye disappeared from Seattle on Aug. 11, It f= aad. He was arrested at Second ave. and Yeslor way by Detectives O. 1. Van Buskirk and T. G. Montgomery The accused man refused to com ment on his arrest. GRAND OPENING SHRINE CIRCUS the EE! S EASON “CAPITAL AND LABOR?” “We want It distinctly understood | ~~~~~Good Every Night--~—~ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1922. Paul Staren Has No Fear of Hereafter “I don't care if I die. There ts no hereafter, 1 will simply rot away lke any horse or cow, and that will be the end of me.” ‘Thin was the belle frequently ex- | pressed by Pau! Staren, the Wilson | Creek fiend, during the three weeks | he worked on the J. J. Kietn ranch at Edwall, just before he murdered August Bonjiornt and seriously | | Wounded other members of the farm | jily, Staren was convicted of first degre murder and sentenced to hang | TAlllan Kietn, who talked times with Btaren, declared Saturday |that the man did not exhibit any | MEXICANS LOSE JUAREZ REVOLT Five Killed and 20 Wounded in Battle EL PASO, Tex., Sept, 20-—~ Five persons were reported killed and 20 wounded when the garrison at Juarez, scrows the Rio Grande from here, revolted early today, and fighting broke out between revolutionists and Mexican federal troops. Later reports to immigration officials here were that Obregon istas had regained control, driv- many jrlens of Insanity, but that he was! ing the rebels from the town. [extremely hot tempered. Stray shots fell on the Amerioa: “Tle wan the wildest kind of a! side of the international bridge, kill bolshevik,” she anid, “and ridiculed any idea of @ hereafter. The mere) mention of government or religion | would send him into « tury.” MURDERER, 20, IS GIVEN LIFE | TACOMA, Sept. 10. — Suddenly changing his plea after a jury had been impaneled to try him for first degree murder, Ted Carpenter, 20, | pleaded gullty to second degree mur der and was given a life term tn |the state penitentiary by Superior | Judge Card Friday afternoon. | Alton Dugan, 19, alleged accom | plice, pleaded guilty to attempted | | bishway robbery and was sentenced |to from 12 to 15 years. | Carpenter shot and fatally wéund je4 Frank Kelly, exservice man, in an attempted holdup here August 4.= Donald Carpenter, 18, brother of Ted, will be tried November 6 on the murder charge. |PLANE FALLS; TWO KILLED ing Ruiz Ponte, 18 years old In the mutiny all prisoners were released from jail at Juarez, and the | officers seized and imprisoned by the rebels, General looting followed, and hun dreds of shots were fired. Fleeing federal soldiers comman- deered the roofs of the tallest build ings in the city and poured fusiliades on the revolutionists swarming in the streets below. The international bridge between the American and Mexicon sides was cloned during the fighting, but Gen. J. J. Mendez, commander at Juarez, made bis way here, He re ported the revolutionists were led by & Capt. Valverde Advices to immigration officials said the loyal government forces re- maining in Juarez were reinforced after daybreak, and in a concerted attack beat back the mutineers. '4,000 Sailors on Lakes Call Strike CLEVELAND, Sept. 30-—Strike of more than 4,000 sallors employed on Vensels of the Lake Carriers’ asnocia- jtion han been called, effective at mid- night, by K. B. Nolan, secret ot MOUNT VER , Ohio, Sept. 20. | the Lake Seamen's union pry |—A falling airplane carried two men|cago, according to officials of the [to their death shortly after noon, /union here. The strike order followed here today lrefusal of the Lake Carriers’ asso- | Amos J. Lieehty, pilot, of Orrville, |ctation to grant the demands of the and Marino Dunlap, passenger, of |union for inauguration of the eight Mount Vernon, were killed when hour, or three-watch, day. the plane fell from an altitude of| - mannan 2,600 feet Saturday Pe * were searching | Liechty had been carrying passen-| tor W. L. Lyman, retired merchant sre on short trips near Mount Ver-jo¢ Vancouver, B. C., who disap | mon for the last week [peared in Seattle while a visitor | The bodies of the men were man-|at the home of « friend. Lyman gied with the wreckage of the fallen| probably is suffering from aphasia, plane. it Is though | Famous Diving Beauties S 50c TICKET maintained will see America thru | ST. JOHN, N. B., Sept. 30—En|must not go College Sunday route for the port of Digby, © 8.,| No other attitude commensurates Beattie Labor college classes last night, the Canadian Pacific | with self respect or is possible for held in the Labor t for the fall term # y- will be lean labor movemen and social forces in h women in home olution, expression arers will be John C. Secretary of the farmer-iabor Edward R. Guthrie, William and Miss Esther University of Washington. Piano Lessons home or mine. Alice Gasser, Among the subjects to be history of the the meager early dispatches, mple will steamship Empress went ashore {n|the United States, It must mean at 2p. m. the Bay of Fundy. |that, for Secretary Hughes has do-| No ides of life has been reported to|clared America supports the policy jof freeing the historic waterway t, the eco- American and indus and pay: | Cupid Attacks ern civilization. If the Turks chal lenge that pronouncement America Deputy Coroner | cannot sit back and let others meot Dan Cupid, armed with his trusty |the Crescent’s defiance for hi bow-narrer, invaded the morgue Sat-| American diplomacy cannot afford urday and carried off Deputy Cor.|to bluster and then back down oner Harry B. Kennedy. In spite of |Such an anti-climax now would be Kennedy's efforts to keep his mar.|® direct incitement to the breeders |riage to Mins Doris ©. Lay, 1129 a8th|of another world war, ave., a seoret, the truth leaked out.| Already encouraged by an un- |The newlyweds left immediately aft-| expected weakness on the part of er the nuptial knot had béen ted in| the ailies, the situation is delicate, |e bowline, for Spokane. but the government at Washington Kennedy, Moore, of |neparating Asia Minor from West THOUGHT CEN’ at Sen A with honor. Also it will profoundly influence world events for future years. SEATTLE NEW TER Thursday, Oct Fine © 4, ih AW Sundey, October 1 Lecture by Albert W, Merritt Bubject 1 “Liherty imitation Evening Subject, § Sund, EACH NI Seats Free Western Bi ™, Dut of Darn: PUBLIC CORDIAL Sun a tans Tuesday, October 3—The End of Autocracy, Political Wednesday, October 4—Health Night—A Sick Wo: Friday, October 6—Disarmament, the League of October 8— The Turkish Triangle Fourth Avenue and Lenora Street—T'wo Blocks BIBLE SOLUTION Free Lecture by Evangelist Taylor G. Bunch, Sunday Night, 7:45 Other Subjects First Week: and ober 5—The World’s Unrest—C Who Will Contro! Constantin GHT EXCEPT MONDAY 7:45 P. ble Chautau AND rid Under the X-Ray o -ause and Remedy Nations and Armageddon and Bible Prophecy ople? qua Tabernacle North of Times Building Industrial—How and When? f Prophecy SATURDAY All Welcome