The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 20, 1922, Page 6

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/ THE SEATTLE STAR WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2 1922 BIRDS OF A FEATHER FLOCK TOGETHER Publishing Co, Phene Main and United Prese Bervion By 1o, # montha, FATE year, By carrter, city, a ot & Ruthman, Mpecial Represe 26 Ban Francteoe of- ck bhig.; Chteage office, Tribune bidg.; New York effios, Pacific bidg., Reston office, Tremont bide, Stand With Yakima Legion Posts an Legion members and other Americans from the state should rally heartily to the support of Yakima valley posts which are standing behind Seo- ets of Interior Fall in his rulings that bar Japs from ‘akima Indian reservation lands as fast as existing expire. Tipe are bringing much pressure to obtain a nding of the ruling. They are working on the ney-nerve of Central Washington business men, on ; sentimentality of ill-informed ministers, on the upidity of the Indians. | But they have the state law against them. They ve American sentiment against them. matters stand, they will have to move out—back n, it is hoped. Keep them moving. Stand behind Valley legion posts in their determination that the law be observed and the rich lands be kept as a man’s heritage. THE OLD SCALAWAQ! not been home earlier than 10 o'clock any night tn Washington have been a member of this house.—Representative Greene (R.), Dr. ©. Saunders, Canadian agriculturtst, produced one head wheat” by crossing Inferior wheats. Last year the crop of was over 300,000,000 bushels. That's anti-race suicide suggests a big Pan-American league, but America seems to panning without this ‘Broke out in Wellesley, so Mr. A. B. See, who wants girls’ schools should be happy. ope ° , Foiling Fisher's Dream are predicting the doom of the battlesh!p and th of an era of super-airplane against super rine,” The Star stated the other day in a dispatch Ow the house naval appropriations committee re | President Harding to call a second arms confer invite Britain, France, Italy and Japan to join d States in limiting the airplane, the submarine, naval craft. The first arms conference left f the reckoning. is good, if cable. are many difficulties, however, in the way of aircraft. A “commercial” airplane makes a good bomber or scout with a few lightning iges; and it is unlikely any country would agree to “commercial” planes. ‘to submarines and naval auxiliaries, the job is They are never used for peace purposes, and E very well be constructed in secret. ee aer® Pumen ot. the British admiralty, years ed the submersible dreadnaught. a the British achieved it during the great war semi-submersible Benoa gee mene are now &@ great new “mystery ship,” at a narin ich, it is said, (very nearly dream. The secret is being very closely less, should the limitation of aircraft prove there should be no objection on the part of Uiiskinetek aqusiesed hy 5 cine’ enttins r agreement a use and tonnage of under-water craft and auxiliaries. t, this would seem quite logical if the first instance. coreey ee (ee ener beaeane ey anly Imew We All Love Those Farmers transcontinental railroads with terminals on ound have joined forces to spend a million dollars Northwest to the farmers of the Middle West. pia, Inc.,” an organization of 100,000 boosters Golden State, has raised an equally large fund fell California” to the farmers of Iowa and Kansas. ida hotel men have just agreed upon a plan to at- } Middle West farmers to 50,000 cute little bunga- to be built near the Everglades, is preparing to spend a million to get Middle d Southern farmers to settle on the broad acres and Saskatchewan. That is there about those interior farmer chaps that everybody want ’em? think yon have finished Christmas you your shopping you slways estimated 49 million people will stumble over toys on the floor loves @ fat man dressed like Santa Claus. Dill and the Columbia Basin Goethals, who surveyed the Columbia Basin told a house committee in Washington last week: ae gravity plan is probably preferable to the Grand ile ge a@ government commission must de- project is so big that no agency but the federal ment can undertake it successfully. ‘8 what C. C. Dill said before he was elected sena- Let's ee 39 was it said Dill was an enemy of the re your big earrings. If you grasp one firmly tn each hand she iitaads te tare ber hood. af i & chip on your shoulder and you get your block knocked off, Judicially Talented Volstead cannot well blame Attorney Untermeyer and r tative Keller for wanting to quit the Daugherty chment proceedings before that judiciary commit- Chairman Volstead announced, at the beginning, _ THE SKY LINE Ny PRUGE 190-Litte, Brown & Company BEN (WOLF) DARBY, expert woodaman and oanootst, ts shell-shocked in France and loses his identity after returning home, Me drifts into « criminal life, but he partly recovers while he ts robbing a bank tn Beattle As a remuit he ts caught and sent to the state penitentiary at Walla Walla, where he ts confined until FORA MELVILLE, aged triend of hia family, finds him and persuades the governor to parole him in his eustody, Together the two men walk out | of Seattle, northward toward British Columbia. Mere promises Ben an interest in a gold mine which his brother, HIRAM MELVILLE, has found at Snowy Gulch, B, O, The latter died shortly after writing to Mera about the claim. In his letter he explained that he had not had time to record the claim and warned his brother to look out for JNFPFERY NEILSON and dis gang. Ken protests against Mera’s gencrosity He withdraws his objection, however, when Melville explains that he had been in love with his mother, The soane now shifts to Bnowy Gulch, where we find BEATRICE NEILSON, the beautiful daughter of Jeffery Nellson, repuls. ing the rude advances of RAY BRENT, her father’s partner tn crime, After Uiis enoounter, Brent rejoins Nellnon and CHAN HEMINWAY, and the three of them decide to Jump IMram Mel- ville's claim. They agree to have Beatrice join them after they are extab- Uahed on the stolen property, keeping her in the dark as to their true Purposes, NOW GO ON WITH THR BTORY. | They had worked for thetr meals At @ Nitti town at the end of stes! | ang aol manuel tot}—dut Ben and Beram ended the first lap| ny a vesee gmt, anual toni of their journey, They had had gy ase papa dey oa9 “ good traveling theae past days | Doth Sometimes they mended fence, | Steadtly they had gone north, thru | sometimes helped at farm labor, and the tilled lands of Northern Wash-|one gaia morning, with entire good ington, thru the fertile valleys of o4. t i lower British Columbia, traversing | “*! 684 cheer, they beat into cleantt great mountain ranges and penetrat- | D0 every carpet in a widow's cot- ling gloomy forests, and now had, 's® And the sign of the outcast come to the bank of a north-flowing | ¥®4 fading from Ben's flesh. river—a veritable flood and one of | The change was marked in his fuon the monarch rivers of the North.| Hs eye seemed more clear and Every hour thetr companionship | *esdfast, his lips more firm, the lines had been more clone and their hopes |Of his face were not so hard and higher. Fovery waking moment Hen | 4¢ep. His fellows of the underworld had been swept with thankfulness | *oUld hate scarcely known him now for the chance that had come to|—tie lips and chin darkened with him. ' (Turn to Page 13, Column 1) LETTERS EDITOR In Defense of the Mayor Etitor The Star: help them, they could throw thetr What's the matter with the ma-| front and back doors of the church Jority of the mininters of Seattin? 1/0P*® for the poor fellows that haven't @ place to sleep, and hel think instead of finding fault with| {nem in many ways inetead of ter, the best mayor we have ever had ing to take the Iittle pleasure we they would try to help him, as the | Poor working men have by closing Bible says, “love your enemies if they the dance halls If Mayer Brown would do what thetr religion teaches | has to close those, why not all of them to do." Help instead of knock | them? M. REED, and ge among the poor people and 1819 Lucille Bt jane have gotten behind on the pay. menta and otherwise financially erm. darrassed, and know it was all on | account of the cold he caught gotrg ouse a little upon the subject treated, if you please. Ponsibly, too, you may be prompted to answer this letter in the main thru the papers. them by holding all the land. What There to no doudt that the work: |" ® A who ts not « bolshevist but ers thruout the world are secking re Nef, but permit me to urge that not only unstable conditions are the cause but do you not realize that edu- cation Is becoming the weapon used for relief from an old order? BStabil- ization certainly is a remedy. The world thruout has been crying for ft thru the agen. It needs a fixed value upon a labor unit. Is net gold & whimsical commodity to measure ifeand death upon? Aside from tts use in the arts and sciences, te this! metal merely an ornament of savage) mimicry? Permit me to eay that tf you mean to polnt out that capitaltets will ever be frightened into stabilizing money you and we shall be without our) hosts, They will stabilire when it comes to their profits, but for the other “nigger” never. You are cer. tainly fully aware that the larger the corporation the more stabilizing {t can do. The Standard Of! company, for instance. Now why do you not come out for government stabilizing? You know that education will surely ameliorate the human race, and that {t Is therefore tn point blank oppost- tion to Instability, which Is little leas than another name for inequaltty. When one gets upon a proper plane of thought in this matter of political economics, one simple word becomes the gem. That word fs “truth.” It is paradoxical why you and many others refuse to allow It to come out. There is no hope for this old order, ® worm! In Mneland, as you say, Progress is the word. In Italy, too, | sure enough. In Turkey, even. Why | should the old order that haw played| | an unfair game be in fear? Rem- edying these conditions precisely as | they have come about, to the dispar ity of the masses, is the correct order | of the day-pertod, and preciasly what has all the time been on the books. Who, therefore, should be tn fear? May I venture that fn my opinion we have had some 100 years of mis education? The center almed at in our schools t# not honesty. It is | profital Profits are but another nanie for confiscations. Confiscation: those things extorted from anot! labor to live upon. The East in aat- | Urated hopelessly with that idea, |The truth of the real attuation ts | most appalling. Note, for inetance, | what the late war showed. Had the | Germans been wiser they would only | have had to hold out a short time longer to eee this country robbed bankrupt by fte own traitors. Our remedy is government owner. ship if we want to stabilizes, and death to traitors, Our educators should get busy with proper educa. tion and save a lot of bloodletting |some future day for their errors, | Have you ever suggested that profits | are things that make the rest of the world poorer? Bincerely yours, A. B, HOLLOWAY, Montesano, Wash. LETTER) FROM \VRIDG Dear Folke: E MANN I've heard the youngsters make the break that Santa Claus tn Just a fake. With all the confidence of youth they think at last they've learned the truth, and Santa Claus has hit the #kids— excepting just for little kids. But Santa Claus can stand the gaff—our line of chatter makes him laugh. He knows, beyond the alightest doubt, he's been gupremely lied about-—-more yarne have centered round his name than hubby's quiet poker gamé, They talk of all tho toys he brings, and say he dors astounding things, ike flying thru the winter air, down chimneys seven inches square, and trimming trees ond stacking toys without a single bit of noise, And then some others put us wise that this ts just a pack of lies, and dvlefully they start to sing that Santa Claus “ain't no such thing.” But just between myself and you, I'd say that neither one ie true. (Weel Woot!). Intro. “Wi the Dog.” Fox-Trot. Frank end Hie Orchestre. A-3743 7B< Fox-Trot. Ted Lewls end Hie Bend. A Dream of Romany. Fox-Trot. ase Paul Specht and His Or- A-3728 Se chestre. AS37% TS< POPULAR SONGS All ter the Love of Bike. Yeu Can Have Him, | Don't Wast Him, Dids’t Lowe Him Any- how Bhuce. Von ond Schench. A-3T35 TBe lap (A Wonened S>. Al Jolson. You Dont Think So, You're Creny. Preak Crumit, Miedeatppi "Way Down Yonder i New Or- leans, Blossom Seeley. A-3744 Tie A-3731 Te INSTRUMENTAL AND VOCAL SELECTIONS I Know I Have Another Building. ita nar me | RE Base ne Ortentale. (Cul) A-3726 78< Per the Sake of Auld Lang Syne. Buddy Dewn the Field. Yale Songs; Medley Ne. 2— Wake, Free a, Wake; Walts. Amici; Brave Mother Yaley Moanalua Mula. Ukelele Solos. Bright College Years. Frank Ferera. A-3739 75< Shannon Four. A-3TZ3 TBe SYMPHONY AND CONCERT SELECTIONS Robin Adaie. Scotch Ate, Soft When I Was Seventeen. Swedish 79971 $1.00 folk song. Florence Macbeth, A-3733 $1.00 La Gioconda—“Cielo @ Mar.” eaves and Ocean.) (Pon- Where the Morning Glerice i) Charles Hackett. Twine Around the Door, came | i gare Homing. (Del Riego) ot Home oar Seagle. © Promise Me. _ (De Koven) — ee Carmela Ponselle, A-3732 $1.00 Spanish Dance, Op. 21. (Sare- Tannhauser March. (Wagner) sate) ae (cron Vp sia “Faust.” Canzonetta. From etre jan Opera A-62324 $1.50 SCIENCE Mendel’s Law, Tested in Berlin, Almost Proves Out, @ Per Cent Error. A recent investigation in Bertin aby most, but not quite, proves Mendelé law. Gregor Johann Mendel wee o@ Austrian monk trained as @ ecientioy He proved that heredity is no slip- shod happening but ts governed by fined laws. According to Mendel's law the ohfl- dren of two blue-eyed persona should all have blue eyes, The Berlin inves- tigation included 627 children, with both parents having blue eyes. Out of these 687 children 626 had blue eyes, but 12 had brown eyes, It was important, of course, that the parent age be definitely established in ell cases included in the investigation, ‘The interesting thing now to be de- termined ts this: When the rule so (nearly proves out, why ts there an exception of 2 per cent? In experimenting with animals the rule works exactly. Shipped anywhere in (Prepal Average Weg OCEAN FISHERIES CO. 4a Mal “Oldest and Most Hell he didn’t think there was anything in the case. upon, all the other “lame ducks” in Washington “Quack! Quack!” . Volstead shows a judicial turn of mind that sug- him for one of those new federal judgeships, or thing equally as good. the most expensive gift we can think of is the gift of gab, stone to the alias le 9 diamond They're right to my that Santa lives, but wrong about the things he gives; for he's the Spirit of the Yule, who brings us love, the Golden Rule, the open heart, the friendly mind, the sens» of peace with all mankind. Nor docs he pass @ person by, nor fall to heed a #ingle ory; for on the wings of love he brings a wealth of real and lasting things, and Banta Claus will do his part if we but keep an open heart, Below are listed Seattle’s Authorized Columbia Dealers, who at all times can supply you with the LATEST Columbia Hits: REMICK'S SONG & GIFT SHOP YOUNGSTROM & NELSON BUSH & LANE PIANO CO. PROPOR as Telephone Elliott 2702 | 416 Union Street Telephone Elliott 1051 | 1519 Third Ave. ‘Telephone Niatn $887 HOPPER-KELLY COMPANY LIBERTY MUSIC SHOPPE Gr MUSIC HOUSE 1421 Third Avenue ‘Telephone Kiliott 0112 | 1516 First Ave. Telephone Killott 61st | 24th Ave. & B6th Bt “Telephone Sunset 694 THE MELODY SHOP, 1402 Second Ave.; Telephone Main 2062

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