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i ‘| 4 s fen F New York What Is “Unconstitutional”? “In all criminal prosecutions, the aceused shall enjoy the trial, by jury of the and public an impartial shall right to a speedy the informed state and district crime wmitted, which district have been previously tained by law, and to be of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him his favor, and to have obtaining the to have compulsory process for witnesses in the assistance of counsel for his defer So reads the sixth stitution. P But the United States circuit court of appeals, sitting in Chicago, has once again held the United States consti tution to be unex i So many abuses of Seen in the use the injunction tourts that congress, when it drafted the Clayton act, Specifically provided for jury trials, “In all cases within the purview of this act such trial may be by the court, or, upon demand of the accused, by a jury.” So reads the | Clayton act. But, so amendment to the United States con- work had been power by the federal of ; of 8 s this opinion of the U, S. circuit court of appeals in the case the Wisconsin railroad strikers, that part of the Clayton act unconstit lt The Workers have no right to a trial by jury And some folks wonder why the plain people of these United States are beginning to revolt against the powers assumed by the judges. is iona ed over slack army enlistments, Truth is, fewer ough to go and joint the army Washington is alari Men are gelting mad « J. L. Wallace, Battle Creek, Mich., smoked a cigaret in bed, so is hav ing some new skin grafted on. Paris women are wearing white wigs. They will wear anything over F there, anything or nothing New York is becoming so wicked, of a governor. ‘A detourist tells us the speed limit is often ene mile an hour. An Architect 3,000 Miles Away The trustees of the Community Hotel company doubt- Tess could do an awfully good job of building a SECOND k. They would be able mistake | to profit by their Hotel Oly: Tn making this comment ' ar does not intend any Sarcasm and does not infer any sh criticism. The ho- tel board has made mistakes, several important ones. The members mostly recognize that this is true and are do- ng what they can to remedy the errors. Probably any like committee of Seattle citizens put up | against the intricate and unfamiliar task would have Made mistakes just as serious and just as numerous. Hence there is no occasion whatever for censuring these | men; rather is there occasion for expressing appreciation of their hard work and recognition of the fact that, after all, we are getting the much-needed community hotel built on a generous, adequate scale. Nevertheless, it would be foolish for Seattle to ignore ‘the mistakes. Rather it will be the part of wisdom to study them so that in future community undertakings they will not be repeated. ‘One of the first major blunders was in the selection of an architect. A firm of national reputation was retained. ts headquarters are in the East; most of its practice is 'in the East. Its ideas are Eastern. The result was that )it designed an Eastern type. of hotel, specifying materials and types of construction that are eminently suitable there, but not so desirable here. And being in and of the ast, the architects were not in the close consultation F with the trustees that would have worked for the best re- Sults. The trustees, in fact, did not even see the specifi- | cations, The Star is informed by some of the members, until after the contract was let. Hence, a number of men - on that board who rank high in construction work had no "Opportunity to give the enterprise the advantage of their ‘special knowledge at a time when it would have done the | most good. Seattle has first-rate architects, just as it has first-rate businesses in nearly every other line. As a general rule these firms will turn out a job mor tisfactory from a “Seattle viewpoint than some more highly specialized firm Maybe she needs a governess instead ADVE et ‘The Ju the way that packing houses Je quite a comon was th Dr. Wiley as cer to at Roos Aa } han thought he v | health of th successors have of th Sta whose fri highly of him, a taken the © to prenory who deal in © president of the t thought \ 4 whose enemi * 4 AT TAR ALL SIGNS POINT IN THE SAME DIRECTION PY Gouty + (TINK. MEBBE | Fool EM, MEBBE ILL STAY RIGHT HERE TURERS BY BERTON BRALEY re enturers of old, ra of a LETTERS EDIT nforce the Pure Food Laws lived n good deal He weven dayn ar t as Mr. Harding s curled up on the bed 10 di sh to make is t were taken by # anything per interested in food th who was mor © was| health of th ud hi Wiley} he was In t deal tn it would pr well toda 1 far tow The Btates those of us © that, Hin 6 the} rd getting him a re-elect! Re ot Uni has mado ft tmporsible ene pw and then to have any ance that what can be had is ase 1 probably all the department, the those who have been alive and would have gone who like a little drink time, will n natio ity Tusa ‘copt ndaries a whole who but their © hands betwee and want and death by starv we Ww tion on begin hearing plea for nd a chance for life whic been denied them, nd all It apy what are me that stone pris persecuted people are butting to be in thi * Measure am wel begin wo a organizations ng to be needed before 1 the pages of history I ing of much right out to should and per and thie tion, come | mitted by such countr Brita: France, Italy, etc. and Ame | stands by with never a word of How will these who have bowed ke sui onpecia 20th pro- | tent i i the satanic arrangement . them: eamon forget there remembers about time w ma to me it is i our ng before aid wer in all governmental affairs? now as tho there is some samo npirit being evinced plain working people in this country n ok by a more inte of that han : Ing of electors and cle thin idea of gaining, putting out of by on commission” pro- ted for ur / Rumania at the present time. | appears | against | |men will not, | vision, a man in Armenia at ed than ts found tn the country on | tion saying, the Bosphorus, but with such o start | whic wholesale | Culmination LETTER FROM Dear Folks A room with bath on trol myself, “By golly, there's an ul mean it Just the trolley” sound a bit astounded, “That's tarted scheming how te “With bath en thought haps the galoot is dreaming that Without a bit of joxhing at daily washing wouldn't be think ft quite th their hair and face 1 nee them evary me and stick adorning all thelr nearer to the facts the way they on the morning trolley ear! But still, 4 bit distrensing to offend the art of being frank #o VE we're all progrensing prudist ank, perhay never meen it, tho I've traveled all around, I thought the way it seomed tc o's found the the proper place to do thelr m ning in the trolleys ev August ent ad. 1 told And Vd didn’t tramodern fad! since » nound ed lke a stunt that's pretty » make the trolleys pa a novel thing to do, I new! Per and some proper we ad, duties fixing wording of the to do our Alread beauties up ry bad n: erywhere w when women ply with puff get a the mirror *, lips and hair fo @ freer, franker age And tho they fall to fool us, and ys they help to se 1 us in the Plan to Americanize i Whole Russian Nation « Agricultural Development of Country Is a Assured tussia will standard | a in 1927. At] later than MOSCOW probably rea f agricultural produ all events it will not be Aug, 14 her pre-w Americanization of Russia is our slogan Th nited Press in an exclusive M. Kryzhanovaky, presi-| dent of the “Gosplan,” or state plan-} committee, Kryzhanoveky is an | wer by profession, an old and} sonal friend of Lenine and is the} of the famous plan for the cation of Russia, which was| 1 1931, This plan contem completion of a whole net- | se statements were made to the } inter- | plates work of combined electrical plants all Ttussia within 15 years, after when the complete new agricul-| a will be in effect repeatedly been called | nnection with | reorganiz- | raid to the he fact ix, that ur ultimate plans regarding n and improvement of ver have persona in co while reconatruc testors against indecent persecution, | we do not know how soon the spme principles will be turned against us. }At loast those who did not protest | gains, this banishment and death sentence of the Armenians are now in seats of power in our own | and those countries of the allies, and can they be trusted in governmental | ffairs of any kind? ‘This savage/ atment of a helpleas people is only equaled by the atrocities committed t the Jews in centuries past, | re recently in Russia and Poland, with pogroms hanging over them in The| persecuted are too few in number to ir own part against their tor- | sand murderers, and nations | ike Britain, America, France and Italy meom too afraid of their com- | mercial relations or something else, I don’t know what, to take a defi nite and firm stand on the subject; maybe afrajd of the Moslem power, which includes far more than the Turk; but it has got to be met some and no time like the present, and get it over with. They are now & people without a country, and only God Almighty can help them, for} The Revelator saw in ing with outstretched arms in pplica. “Come and help us, h vision seems to have had its in this, our day CITIZED BeA.E ment time, Signal Arm on Street Cars | | population amounts our country are—let me say, Ameri can—we remain with our feet on the ground as far as the immediate cal. culating and practical work are con- | cerned. ‘Ho, for instance, we figure that we will be able to bring the agricul tural situation back to the pre-war standard as late as 1927, or even 1926. While this refers to the quan- lity of tilled and sown acreage, the quality will, at the same time, be on a much higher level than "before. “In all of our measures we choose or, you might say, are forced by circumstances to choose—the medium middle way. We do not go too fast or two slow. Thus, while we are | paying great attention to the intro- duction of tractors, we will not neg- lect to increase our stock of horses, now 7,000,000 head short, and other livestock. Our transportation system still operates under a considprable loss and requires subsidies, But we have reduced our railroad staff from 1,- £00,000 to 700,000 men, and the deficit has been reduced proportionately Our railroad rolling stock is slightly over one-third of that maintained in pre-war times. However, this is in excess of our needs, ax the amount of transportable goods is even less than one-third compared with pre- war days, Under these conditions, if we increase our rolling stock, we in- crease our deficits. Consequently, we haye decided to increase our railroad rolling stock only in the proportion the output of agricultural and other products Increases, “Owing to tne fact that our rural to 108,000,000 against 26,000,000 city folk, we must naturally turn our first and greatest attention to the development of the agriculture. Other industry comes second. “Americanization of Russia is our slogan. While with regard to in- dustry this would mean concentra- tion on the greatest scale, we, on the contrary, have separated it into three different groups—the heavy iron industry, the light metal indus- try, and the byproducts. Each group is now being concentrated and re- organized complete for itself. For this purpose many works are being closed and others opened. Only when this separate concentration ta func- tioning fully will we reunite these brancher, and will do it in the most modern and practical way. “The light metal industry present producing per year (a pood is equal to 36.112 American pounds) and is working at a profit annual output up to 100,000 poods until the year of 1927. “The heavy industry still demands, is at] 20,000,000 poods | We expect to bring the| NGTON o- BY HARRY B. HUNT INGTON, WASHI The “millions bast, ew can wevem wens at dozen the next members senate mmpute gure The effort ition” of exhaust of maintaining hig Washington and the urrent campaigns fully $7,600 salary paid the the Job really pays tq who is on the level is sense of duty performed ynor” of being listed ig | cost re the All legislator senator the @ living and the cane was that of Wik ingham of Vermont, whe month afty years ia public iife, Hig about $36,000," half is represented ome in Montpelier, Altho he was president of « coum be the appraisers of big 11 in cash and wh hb senator now rated as thé member of congress i » Couzens of Detroit, who piled up his money while in partnership with Henry Ford us @ pioneer in the fiivver industry. Next to Cou zens comes Lawrence Phipps of Colorado, Phipps retired from bus: iness in 1901, at the age of 89, after the Carnegie company, of which hé was vice president and tréasurer, sold out to the United States Steel corporation. | Other senatorial millions are rep. jresented by McKinley, of Ilinolg who has large traction holdings; | Elkins of West Virginia, who ini |herited a large share of the Elkind estate, built up out of coal and iron; Warren of Wyoming, and Gooding of Idaho, ranch and ming Interests; McCormick of Illinois Gerry of Rhode Island and Stanfield of Oregon. ; eee | Seekers after international hare |mony suggest that a possible first |step could be taken right here in | Washington. The proposal contemplates the or- ganization of an all<diplomatic or |chestra and chorus. Talent for the j outfit, it ts suggested, might include Mirza Huasein Khan Alal, the Per- sian minister, pianist; A. Hamilton. | Gordon of the British embassy, sax- |ophone; Dr. V. de Sokolowski of the | Polish legation, violin. Jonkheer ds |Seriere of the Netherlands and Cap. jtain Rigal of the French embassy }could supply the barbershop me ody, while Henry Getty Chilton of the British embassy could star as vocal soloist. half a billion and the reorgantzation is not yet completed. While formerly soft coal was chief- |ly produced, we have turned to the extraction of anthracite. The ad- vantage is two-fold: first, the bet- |ter quality of coal, and, second, the |lower costs, because the anthracite |is found much nearer the surface. “You ask me about my child, the \electrification plan? The originally |foreseen period of 15 years will be- | gin in the year 1927, instead of 1921, |as formerly figured. But all our jmeasures are being taken in such a |way that it will be easy to adapt | everything later to the electrification | system without any great losses. In other words, the works are, being con- centrated in those regions where the big electrical centers will be erected | later. “What branches are prepared to give to the foreign capital? Thete is | practically rone which we could not |give, with the exception of existing | railway lines. We are, however, will- not | » This has made it to mako and sell! nd tastes like ing to give concessions for the erec- |tion of new railway lines so, for in- | stance, the very important line from | Siberia to Turkestan. We are able |to give great agricultural concessions, for instance, more than 6,000,000 autoista when the car door is being | and will for sometime to come, re- opencd? |quire heavy subsidies. The largest These arms could be operated the | part of the produce of both the first me as the desk extension tele-| and second industes are being used es, and attached to the end or | for the transportation system, both © car, and operated by the | rail and water. Sditor T' 1 have noticed on several occasions, Star eopich has no understanding of our local needs and prob- S. admit had no harm in him, has been | killed by : < 3 not be @ alight from the Crops are a little Iate this year because the farmers have to wave at | forcement of the pure-food laws by| the real thing | street care, that motorists approach. | jomeone who ia Interested in tho And on top of that, the ame gov-| | the tourists. | someone who is interested And f that, the #ame FOV-| ing disregard the law and keep right | « going to kill us very profitable that looks when passengers een ene ek Autos are not as thick during the rush nours as some of the drivers, Women will never be men’s equals until men object to being kissed. Some people find their most pleasing reflections in a mirror The only successful substitute for brains is silence Fish never realize what a t you had getting bait All flowers get loved except wall flowers. The Price You Pay for Gasoline The amount of gasoline placed in storage this year has broken all records, but before you rise to cheer, Mr. just read the news sent out from an oil men’s meeting in Chicago: Rather than reduce the price, “twenty-five major oil )¥efineries of the mid-continent field will close during August to eliminate an oil and gasoline surplus.” In other words, by exercising the oil industry’s own pe- culiar economic Jaw of supply and command, they are determined to keep prices up or bust. _ Senator Johnson of California is getting so mad he even may split with an infinitive soon. Monster fish aout « million years old has been seen in Nebraska. He is late this year. German marks and our wheat are less than a dollar a bushel, First, Disarm Woman Day by day, in every way, woman is getting along to- ard equality~of the sex There's that Mrs. Burgess, "of Lewistown, Mont., who met her errant, murderous husband at the door and took hree shots at him with a shotgun. Bagged him, too. Why talk of national disarmament, when wives go to | keeping auomatic shotguns behind the front door? Rodolpl: Valentino says he hates to be a male vamp. With the men, ‘this makes it unanimous. A million Fords have been made this year. Police tell us nothing can be done to stop it. Buffalo (N. Y.) detectives trailed gem thieves 14,000 miles before they euit being baffled. A diplomat who went over for light on the Kuropean situation was re ite | fare of those who eat it? and comparat it out of dealing in it nter I bought smelt at a nt and the firm and they all right em the red, rently Jean for Wh rn c = some and got three. them, and he nev er ate We all cat ernmont ts spending mar lisr3 keop o fr that is fit to drt If half t store. | has gills y wife] president no. and| ‘What fools these mortals t He F. H. CONA in Auburn, Wast expended in thin cause b been put to enforcing the pur 2 not be mourning c The Plight of Armenia tor The Star Of all the hideous travesties on jus- | bs tlee this last treaty betw | Turkish government and th jthe limit. The of the vanquished. The allies have permitted the yenkable ‘Turk’ hose governm len were usurped | sp in human guise European | have laid down all moral courage be: |fore the Turk, and one would think |the Turk was the conqueror instead n and bound: | p: rs and {nation, the Armenians, have hed, without redress or any en the|the common humanity usages acce y millions oney and energy that n going. I have seen some pretty jose calls by these careless drivers; they know that they are supposed to stop, but some do not. . Would it not have signal arm attached to the et cars directly behind th car or or gate (am the case n be) at would shoot t and w ‘om nk. be a yur} th been oft ord: | Hes in| ed civilized peoples in the Western | ations | world, their citizenship disowned the government that disrupted country of Armenia long ages a and they turned with al closed against them technical immigration to f some lodging place if they can, ish if they can’t ago by| So far as I can find out, Russia which {the only harbor of refuge those y out “un whole laws, MOST WOMEN, CAN COOK commonplace, ¢% is truly complete expense or effort Ielnga and directed. | City. .seececee State, produce those dainty, Fillin) Street and No.. 4 we If you send for our new bulletin on 8." Fill BUT— Yes, most women can cook (some well, and some not so well) ishes, but few have the divine magic to et morsels, and other trifles, that really delight the eye and inwardly comfort, and without which no meal 1 would ke to acquire this art, without akes and Cookies, out the coupon below as and mail Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, New York Ave., Washington, D. ©, Please send me the bulletin on “Cakes and Cookies, Teli and Fillings,” for which I inclose four cents in stamps, by the KO, into a world by ind or | ais “Siloam,” award- jed prize as Mis- souri’s champion jhoun’ dawg. You | better not kick him aroun’. ourlan hounds, particularly from Clay county, feel they are being | unrighteously kicked aroun’, And by jall that’s peculiar to a houn’ dawg, | it's got to stop, they vow! | This city is in Clay county. Houn’ | dawgs abound around the old familiar pound, but nary a one is caught ‘They always got the freedom of the Place, so familiar a sight were they. Then the city council voted a tax of $10 on each individual houn’, Tax on flivvors ia $3.60, And while tho hounds felt decidedly complimented by the special attention, they decided they weren't from the “show moe” state for nothing. Thelr owners called a mass moot. ing, and a protest parade of hounds | good plan to| same leverage that opens the car | As I live in Rainier valley, I have noticed some cloan escapes along that | lino, as the traffic on that boulevard | in very heavy, Something should be | done. | C.P.RENNING, = | 2 Kenyon St was held thru the streets, The dawgs didn't woar licenses, in defiance of the new law, Hundreds lined the streets, expec- ing something. But nothing trans- pired, excepting a show at the end, Purses were raised for tho best "houn’ dawg.” And “Siloam" was chosen as the mogt typical houn’ dawg in the stato, City. officials employed a special dog oatcher before the parade, But no dawgs were arrested, and the hounds are enjoying speotal liberties, Judge John H. Morrison, justice of the peace, is backing the dogs, and has formed a Missourl Hound Dog Soclety, Mach year now houn’ shows acres in the Volga region, which hag |never been’ exploited. There are, |furthermore, ofl wells, tobacco plan- ually. We closed down many shafts | tations, forests, platinum, gold and in the Don basin and are now oper-| many other branches. ating 260 shafts only. Out of these} “On the other hand, there are 250 shafts, however, we will be able|many branches which we prefer ta to extract just as much coal as form- | give to so-called mixed compayies, of erly with the total number of shafts, | which there are already quite a num namely, about one billion poods per|ber in Russia, for instance, the ex- year. At present the output is over ploitation and export of furs.” “With regard to our coal situation, which has been desperate, I am able to state that this is improving grad- controlled coxohese for any hind of oves cooking or baking. An Easy Way of Home Canning Recommended by Experts The Lorain way of putting up PEACHES, APRICOTS AND BLACKBERRIES At home sounds so simple and easy that {t is almost unbelievable to women accustomed to the old-fashioned method. Yet you can have confidence in every statement wo make about Lorain Oven Canning, It is indorsed by leading domestic science authorities. No standing over steaming kettles, no hours of stir- ring and pot-watching! As the Lorain Oven Canning chart, free for the asking, will show you, every fruit and vegetable is as easily canned. And all keep their fresh-from-the-garden firmness, color and flavor better than ever. Replace your old gas stove with a new Lorain-equipped range now! We will gladly demonstrate it fully to you, Don’t wait! Come in at once and see our CLARK JEWEL AND RELIABLE GAS RANGES SEATTLE LIGHTING CO. 1808 Fourth Avenue Main 6767 will be beld. THE GAS COMPANY