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cs The Seattle Star ed Dally dy The Star Pudliahing Co, 1907 Beventh Ave Phone 4 United Press Bervtes © Per Month, F months $1.60, @ months $2.00, year # a month, Ruchnvai . Newspaper Enterprise Arsoctat mail, out of elty, By carrier, city, Gilman, Nb ettien Manna Canadian Pac! pecial Reprerentattves, oftion, Tribune Bk n office, Tremont Hide, Ban Francisco New York office, A Glimmer of Hope BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Another Armistice day tomorrow. The fifth. Time 4 ‘flies, but world peace seems to be standing still. Europe is worse off today than five years ago and the truce of November 11, 1918, is still only a truce. Another war may overwhelm us at any time, I was in France the first Armistice day, Folks went Wild with the double joy that the great war was over and that there would never be another, It had been a war to end war, so they were told, and the world was shortly to See a definite concert of powers which would make it vir- tually impossible for such a catastrophe to descend upott it again. There was to be a league of peace under the influence of which people all over the world would be left free to x ue their own way of development, “unhindered, un- tened, unafraid.” So President Wilson had said, and plain folks every- where devoured his words as famished dogs might mor- sels of meat. . ‘ oo. What happened, however, was something different. The league of peace, ushered into the world by Amer- ica, was stabbed in the back by the sons of its own moth- er, after which it was mocked for its loss of blood and a of strength by those whose hands had done the stab- ing. .Central Europe crumbled and split apart into a new Balkans, and Germany is falling to pieces, threatening the whole world with disaster. All because a handful of tim- orous and misguided politicians forced America to scuttle from the job of completing the peace which she had helped to win. Reparations, left unsettled, have become an obstacle which may yet wreck half the world, possibly including ourselves. Today the whole world stands on the brink of disaster, which might be avoided if we would but take a hand. Yet there are men like Hiram Johnson, senator from Cali- fornia, and Medill McCormick, senator from Illinois, who stand by calling on America to craw! under the bed rather than act to stave it off. They prate ‘of “mawkish” sentiments leading us into “entangling alliances,” when all anybody asks is that this country, with her traditional courage, protect herself from a possible universal wreck. There is still a glimmer of hope, however. Tomorrow, *n thousands of churches thruout the land, it will be “Armistice day Sunday.” Churches with 20,000,000 adults among their numbers will urge America to co- operate for world peace. Tens of thousands of pastors will explain the world court and tell why it is important we should join. Tomorrow, also, the home of ex-President Wilson will be surrounded by pilgrims come from far and near to tes- tify to their faith in an ultimate league of peace. And last week, in Alexandria, Va., at the laying of the cornerstone of the great George Washington Masonic Memorial, Bishop James E, Freeman told the multitude gathered there that “not until the world has been per- Meated with the spirit of fraternity for which our an- cient order stands and of which the Man of Galilee is the Supreme Exemplar, shall the world go free from the aw- ful curse of war.” Yes, there are signs that our Johnsons and our MeCor- micks are losing ground. Even officials in Washington are beginning to see a light. The tide is rolling up. World corporation against war is as certain as the ‘passage of time. It is never too late with us, so long as we are still aware of our faults - and bear them impatlently—so long as noble propensities, greedy of conquest, stir within us—Jacobl. Perhaps due to leading an outdéor life, a West Virginia tree 150 years We can't understand how such beautiful complexions come out of such sloppy vanity cases. War threatened in Philippines. This may be why Philippine prizefight- ers are coming to America. Head Off This Blow! The women’s council of the University of California has adjourned, and not a minute too soon to prevent a deadly blow at higher education. The council was about to limit the “nights out” of women students to two a week, when a committee of co- eds submitted arguments. It was clearly shown that “young women’s popularity is measured by the evenings passed in the companionship of men students.” How can a girl expect to acquire the higher education, with the avenues to popularity clogged? Perfectly ridicu- lous! Two “nights oft” a week! Are there not seven full nights in a week? But the girl co-eds should not be left to make their fight for popularity rights alone. Shall the men students, in whose hands finally rests the degree of popularity, lie down like meek, sleepy, cud-chewing Cotswolds? Far be it! We count on them to come to the rescue as one gigan- tic man and demand that “seven nights out” be put into the university’s curriculum. We cannot conceive their being contented to see the higher education drool along with measly sample, two nights out a week. Colorado, Nevada and Ctah have opened 52,000 acres to war vets, which is turning them out to graze. They only want to divide Germany into three parts and we thought she was drawn and quartered. Coolidge has been given a pet bear and probably would like to raise it on congressmen. Ralph Greenleaf, pocket billiards champ, almost lost his title, All the leaves are falling. “The Burden” Unconvinced The Philippines have got a real statesman. Chief What's His Name, of the Moros, having observed paternal Uncle Sam’s going record of lynchings, bootlegging, bar- baric crimes and odorous scandals in select social circles and high court circles, frankly proclaims that he rebels because he doesn’t like our style of civilization, and he in- tends to fight to ward it off. This Moro chief may wear a hatpin thru his nose and a towel about his body, eat raw dog, live in a 10x10 mud hut with nine wives and give other indications of barbar- ism, but you have to concede him a strong grasp of state- craft when he hestitates to exchange a condition in which he is happy for one full of what our civilization is exhib- iting. News from Germany: Nests of communists being cleaned out because they were hatching plots. They think a bride in West Virginia burned a house, Must be wrong, Steak is what brides burn. uto riddled with bullets was found in Wilkesbarre, P nswer the riddle. When an they couldn Bad news from Paris: Gobelin tapestries stolen. May plan to use them In Halloween parties. Eiitor Tho star \ In a@ recent issue of your paper Alico Burgess advocates the free use of automatic platols by tho policemen, even tho Innocent by: standers are killed, T wonder if sho would take that point of view if the Viotima had been near and dear to her? “It makes a difference whose ox is gored,” Sho also says abolish party gov. ernment, Does she not know that oureity government js non-partisan? That the mayor ts elected on a non. Editor The Star’ It used to be an established fact that the Flathead Indians (so called on account of thelr practice of bind ing pieces of board to the back and front of the heads of thoir small ehil- dren, to give them the desired flat tened shape), were commonly addict. ed to petty thievery. In this conned: tion an amusing incident occurred in| tho ‘fiftion"’ which was often heard by the writer as it was told by her deceased ploneer husband, ‘Two bacholors in those early days lived in a little cabin on beautiful Whidby island, which was settled before Seattle was ever dreamed of, and which Is the largest, except Long island, of all the islands in the} United States proper, One day, as} was thelr custom, one of the men re: | mained in the field at work while the other repaired to the house to get dinner, He had built a fire in the! stove and was preparing to make biscuits, when a shadow darkened the doorway, Enter a Siwash, known | to the white settlers ax Pappy Job, since he waa the father of a astal-| wart young Indian named Michael) Job. He was clothed tn a single gar ment—a blanket of bright color, An| recalled by tho writer in later years, he waa a little, weazened specimen of Indian manhood, for whom a blanket LETTERS: About Police Guns Editor The Star: I¢ the laws of Seattle do not per | mit property owners within the city limits to have milk goats in thelr | back yards for the benefit of babies | and sick people, why not let the! dairy associations handle goat milk in connection h thelr regular Editor Tho Star Glad to see your fine little “Honest Word,” page 8, October 29, | | Keep it up. I gave my| “m at once, without solicitation, | for Humanity—not for the epread of the Japanese in Seattle, or tae U. 8. A. They area wonderful people, but | not for us to compete with, nor to! intermarry with, I was once in fatuated with the history, art, and customs of Japan; read over 100 books, in Boston and Cambridge |i braries. I have been “out here” in Tacoma and Seattle nince 1905 and have keenly watched the obverse side | of the question | I won't write all I think. I am a D. A. R, one of my relatives way | back (Perry) being Instrumental in It wa Editor The Star I have read the accusations of Dr. A. E. Fletcher, of the First Metho- dist church, Capitol Hill, Seattle, against “Brother Isalah,” in The Star, I am surprised and horrified to learn that one who pro claims himacif to be a man of God should accuse any one without a hearing. He stated| himself that he had never visited “Brother Isaiah's” mgetings before What kind of a person is Mr, Fletch-| er, anyway? I hope God will never have another such as him proclaim: ing to be speaking the word of God I believe God said “judge not lest ye be judged.” And why did he speak slightingly of the young girla who are helping “Brother Isaiah?" Did} SIX HURT IN AUTO CRASHES head on assheet of iron, severly in- juring himself. Dorothy Downey, 1421 Boren ave. was severely bruised Friday night ute driven by M. H. Owen,| ston ave, The accident] occurred at'Bellevue ave. and Pike at Miss Maysel Gaydenki, 4706 W. Juneau st. received a broken rib Friday, when the car in which she} was riding backed down hill at Seattle blvd. and Charles throw-| ing her against the steering wheel.| She said her cousin was driving] and after an argument with her,| jurmped from the machine after put ting it in reverse. A bystander] | stopped the ca | A drunken pedestrian, after on- gaging in a fight, staggered Into the side of an auto driven by Chin Toy, 213% Washington st. Friday | night, on King st. The man was only slightly hurt |Severyns Goes to Prosser on Visit Planning a brief visit with h | brother, John Severyns, and a sister | Poli o Chief W 3, eryna left Se jattle Frid fo Pro | where he will rer untit be acting chief of police. The chief nL TOR partisan ticket? He appoints the chief of pollee and the chief Ap points the nen under him? How then can she say that our elty ts under party government? ‘The policemen should be men of Judgement, and that ts the kind the chief seems to be trying to get, The writer signs herself “Yours for Patriotiom.” Does she call many slaughter thru criminal carelessness, patriotiam? Yours for justice, A, EDWARDS, A Pioneer Reminiscence would be more than enough for @ full suit, r “Kia owyan" were exchanged and the visiter, Instead of squatting upon the floor, ax wan the habit of the aborigines, seated himself upon an opened sack of potatoes near the door—whether with intention or not will never be known, However that may be, ho watched with stolid coun- tenance the preparations fe noonday meal as innocently aa any five-yearold boy might have done. When dinner waa ready the bachelor cook glanced at the door to nee If his partner were in sight, As he did so he noticed the potato sack pettic a little. With one stride ho reached “the stranger within his gates’’ and, grabbing him by the neck, he gave him @ vigorous shake, Out from the folds of the red blanket dropped big potatoes and little potatoes which the Indian had deftly abstracted from the sack ‘upon which he was aitting, kick, exit Pappy Job, a sadder and a wiser Siwash, and it is safe to pro- sume that if ever he visited at that eabin again, he sat on something that did not offer quite so much thmptation to one of a potato-loving race, an did a sack of potatoes, FLORA PEARSON ENGLE, Coupeville, Wants to Buy Goat Milk routes. goat milk for patients, for it ts healthy. But there has been oppo- nition to the sale of this product from certain sources, However, t ¥ recognize the health-gtving qualities of the milk and desire to in it THEO, It. SYPHERS, Sees Japanese Menace ‘opening the closed door,” but not to breed a foreign race amongst The time the true Jap con " 1 it a disgrace to tntermix or be a half-breed, Japan had plenty | of room for her people, averaging very small families, but now It is different Read what Lafcadio Heam sayn in ft books (I don't recall It may be ponsible that Ja {i practice moral jiu-Jiteu on he Western people." They are, and have been doing Well! I get het up” on the Japanese subjec here in our United Btates, expecially as I wee it in Seattle, and must stop. Good “Seattle Btar.” Keep it up (in the right spirit), lest we forgot MRS. W. EF Daughter of Revo! hin Scores Dr. Fletcher our Lord not say, “To the pure all things are pure?” If Dr, Fletcher's mind waa pure and right with God he could not speak so wpitefully and mply fuch things as he has in hie statement, Has ho ever made the blind see and the deaf hear? No, I am sure he has not, And I am sure Brother Isaiah" has never harmed him. Of course, Dr, Fletcher, beautiful church and prosperous con gregation, could not entertain the same piety of thought or the samo erence for the body “Brother Inaiah" soos all the poor and dis eased bodies, broken by years of suf- fering. He has no room for such evil Chought as wan expreased by Dr. | Fletcher. If he does anoint with oll what of {t? I would be very anxious to have my whole body anointed by him if I were suffering. Jesus had no nice, cozy office to examine and treat one in, Dr. Fletcher said God's name was not mentioned. Does he Six auto accidents were reported : to the police Friday night as a|*ink God can hear ono only if His result of the dense fog blanket that|D#me |" spoken by one like himself clung to the highways, In each ac-|!1 @ church very loud and fanciful cident, one person was hurt and with nothing to back it? “Broth Mrs. Molly Ross, Franklin Apts,|¢" Jsaiah" knows his heart 1s pure was knocked down by ‘a car at| “nd right with God—his every action Fourth ave. and Stewart at., re-|!8 for God. That ts why Dr. Fletcher ceiving a broken hip. W. B. Mit- did not hear it chell, 133 Pontius pl, driver of the|, It would have been very strango if car which struck her, took Mra| Brother Isalah” had refuwed to Ross to the city hospital. anoint the dear little girl Aa he G. Bayer, 6 16H ave: Ne teaches, nothing is impossible with struck near his home Friday Goa Pe Did not our Lord raise the a grocery truck dri ie AT dena? Can He not do so again Ir Bravender, Jr, 18, of 6554 18th aye,|Pletcher owes other Isaiah” ¢ N. E. Sayer received a broken left|*Poloxy and a big one. But le poor Dr, Fletcher should make his |heart right with God so “Brothe William Corcoran, 1228 20th ave,(;oart Fight with God wo “Bratton N. was knocked down as he was|,” irrocr Hid bad thduant about to get on a street car atl or oiorvty Tehdo’ of His Geet . Third ave. and Cherry st., by ali, al idlota sgeeeiar aa ca. Griven by J: V. Porria, 715] y o2. 5 Catholic, but my eyes seo Sixth ave, He fell, striking his) oy cd wore 4 ; Brother Isaiah” 4 him, I hope Dr. Fletcher will soon re ent of his most un-Godlike ways and be a true man of God MR, AND MRS, DELMARS, Carnation, Wash, The U. S. Chamber of Commerce Editor The Star I seo by the papers that the Chamber of Commerce, repres as doeg no other organization th rests of the countr comr another year's 6 ‘ and hag filed report, revealing what it has accomplished, also what its alms, ideals and pe the U. 8 i ite First of all, J to KC hamber { rmment ownership of > ships and postal sa ings banks, or at least to any further extension of the lattef, It favors a ubsldy, to be the rehant subsid in cost hip pula operators of i hips, a to represent the difference of operation our and foreign standards, Sounds like a high tariff argument, doesn’t a? Oh, yeu certalr the chamber tariff. an tariff’ they enll it duatri¢ Int of the | On the strength of a hearty | Doctors and hospitals want} with his BY JOHN R. QUINN Five yeara ago the war ended You remember the phrase on officially, However, It hax not their lips and in thelr heurta: “A really ended, nor can it ond until war to end war.’ Yot wars are the principles for which our nol not ended, They went beyond tho seas into a hell of death and destruction that thelr sons and daughters and the and daughters of their brothere might be spared a like horror in time to eqme, Yet today there ts no guarahty, no certainty, that another war will not be forced upon thin nation, or any na at some future time, The American Legion pledged itwelf at its lawt annual conven. dlors fought have been fulfilled to the utmost, ' It In fitting that on this day we should rededicate ourselves to “carrying on’ by solemn deola- ration within our own con nclences, To do your part today in this re-pledging to principle, pause for a moment and recall the principles for which our men went willingly to the chance of death—many to die, none tion to atrive unoeasingly for the “proper co-ordination of our mo-| peace, ‘This does not mean that tor transport, water ways and elec:| we have joined the ranks of trie and steam rallwa a great idea and worthy of consideration, Conservation of national resources is tmidly recommended. Veterans of the world war are highly corm mended for their heroism in making the world safe for democracy, etcetera, but the idea of a bonus for exwervies men is strongly frowned upon. Bitter opposition to a workmen's compensation tnaurance plan to be not up by the federal government at Washington in expressed. Several great national problems are utterly ignored by this mighty organization of business men, For exampls, prohibition enforce | ment, the anti-narcotic crusade, a na- jtlonal antichild labor bill, the recia- those so-called pacifists of war. time memory. Far from it. As long as conditions may make war necensary to protect our nation from aggression or oppression, we stand ready, nay, anxioun, to answer the call to arms, But we wtrive toward an era when our nation and all nations may live and fulfill their destinies without injustice, oppression or the ne. censity to protect themselves from such by foroe, The American Legion pledged itnelf to no one plan to end war. Neither does it ask that you do #0, Jt in a question upon which opinions differ; each must act according to hin belief, Armistice Day Message National Commander, American Legion SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1923 ‘BELIEVE WRONG | Vandals Made Mistake at | Redmond, Is Theory But we do ask that you, upon this Armintiee day, take solemn resolve that you will leave no act undone or word unsaid t may Investigation the lexplsion which ot mysterious wrecked a $20,009 advance, even in the smallest " m1 degree, the ern of perpetual |'°S#ns engine at Campbell's mil) peace, You may not have the |*tly this week, is being pusned by opportunity of speaking from a | county officials, on the theory that platform, but this doon not ex: |the wrong engine was wrecked, it cuse you, If you have one neigh | way jearned Saturday. bor, one friend, whom you can convert to the caune of peace, and The engine, belonging to the fail to do wo, then you have not | Brown & Brown Logging Co, was kept faith with those,who “sleep standing on @ siding owned by in Flanders fields,’ Campbell Mill Co,, which operates a ‘There is an organization, inter sawrnill near Redmond, A week pre: national, of fighting men of the |¥ious one of the engines of the allied armies. ‘This organization |Campbell firm was damaged by 4 has declared that, once brothers | Vandal with a heavy sledge hammer, in arms, they are today brothers |The controls and breakable parts in pence, Nearly every nation | Were hammered to pleces, which stood wide by side in the Prosecuting Attorney Maleolm World War in represented, Here | Douglas, who i pushing the investhe is a nucleus, But the nucleus is | gation, has petitioned the board of not sufficient in itself. It requires | county commissioners to offer $500 reward for the arrest and conviction the active help of world opinion. When the demand for perpetual peace in made THI business, | plosive which demolished the engine, THE most urgent demand of |The Brown & Brown firm already: every man, woman and child, | has posted $1,000 reward. It i hoped then will lasting peace come. I ask that NOW you solemnly enlist in thin greatest cause of all time, the ending of war. Thus, and thus only, can you keep faith with those who kept faith with you In the time of your greatest need, | the large reward will lead to the arrest of the dynamiters. The Campbell firm, according to reports, has been involved in @ con |troversy with {ts workers over a 10 [hour working day, mation service, the con t of the vetorans' bureau, are alike ignored. An for the looting of the public do- matn, there i# not a whisper, | Altogether the program is more |noteworthy for what It leaves out than for what it says, it seems to | me, SEATTLE BUSINESS MAN, Dear Folka: Praise for Apple Display Editor, The Star; While strolling down Third ave, the other day I noticed a nlgn—'Visit | the Apple Display, It In Free!" 1/ went {n and was much surprined to|| 4 find myself in one of the depart- a nents of the Chamber of Commerce, | a bit Well, to my point, I came out of | |that interesting apple display with | lover $100 worth of knowledge. I re- cently came to this wonderful coun try’ from France and have purchased | a home of 20 acres on Hoods canal, count, a rtatement there. it. had. i] wo: A! 1 count it a glorious done which I intend using for the culti takes, altho he ts trying the vation of fruit. I know now what mistakes. But many “mistaker apple trees to buy and where to buy|]| horn of their primal pall aid to profit us after all! them, also how to select seed pota- toes, thanks to the Chamber of Com- merce’s choice in the young lady it has in charge of the exhibit. Yours thankfully, A. C. POLLARD, confusion. Bad News For British Rum Runners If the proposed arrcngement, including a Britain, Is O. K.'d by the Senate, “Secretary of submarine chasers should now be able bootlegging.” The War Within the Churches Grows Serious If the present controversy treaty with Mellon's fleet | to end marine between the Fundamentalists and the Liberals in the Protestant church grows more bit- ter, it may involve the wholo Protestant body in “the ugli- est, naatlost, most damning quarrel any community ever knows—a church war." the World’s News. The most complete book on social usages that ever grew between two covers.—Chicago Tribune LETTER FROM V RIDGE MANN Of all the duties 1 have to do—and often they*seem to mount— the one that I'm often inclined to But after the first of the month I go, with quite a reluc- |] tant alr, to visit the bank where 1 keep my dough—they give me I take it away and I hie me home; and, getting my check-book out, I sit and I ficure and scratch my dome, befogged in numeric It's neldom that I and the bank agree; and often, I must mit, in checking the figures they give to me, 1 have to subtract But once in a while the results I get allow me to merely add; the bank, I discover, has figures set at more than I thought I A even altho tt fs just on © of luck, And so it appears that an avernge man, whatever he under- bent that we think we've made for Iater we find they have lent their What Germany Has Paid, Can Pay, and Must Pay Now that the United States, acting in harmony with England and France, has taken a definite step toward rehabilitating the chaotic conditions in Europe, it will be instructive know somewhat definitely what Germany agreed to pay under the Versailles treaty, already paid, and what she can pay, if forced to do so, 4 In THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, the voice of public opinion is heard in discussion of Secre- tary Hughes’ arrangement with the allied nations. A full explanation of the scope of the inquiry and what it may or may not accomplish is presented. In a supplementary news-feature, a survey has been made by THE DIGEST which shows the condition of the German debt at the present time. The pub- lic has been bewildered for many months by the contradictory statements that have appeared from time to time in various sources estimating Germany’s capacity to pay and the sum she has already paid in, one way or another. A reading of THE DIGEST this week will do much to bring order out of this Other news-features, unusually good, are: Rousing the Nation to Fight One Bug—The Oil Trouble On the Waters— England’s Fourth Workless Winter—Spain’s Directorate on Trial—Radio’s Promise to the Deaf—Our Five Great Oil Provinces—Kipling to the Younger Generation—The “Respectable” Criminal In Court—How Wet Is Pennsyl- vania?—Innocent Men Who Faced Allied Firing-Squads—Movie Films That Malign Our Neighbors—How the President Keeps Fit—How Baseball’s Biggest Pitcher Reached the Top—Topics of the Day—Department of Good English—A Gallery of Interesting Pictures, Illustrating Many Phases of November 10th Number—On Sale Today—All News-dealers—10 Cents Audiences Deeply Appreciate “FUN from the PRESS” 46YX7H have used ‘FUN from the PRE sinoo iis Inaugural and take pleasure in stating that it is tho ‘meatest’ short subject we have presented, The recent addition of the Cartoon Comios is, ih our estimation, a decided improvement ‘FUN from th PRESS’ in the eat! jon of the writer is a worthy subject on any program and one that our audiences appreciate deeply."—Capitol Theater, Altoona, MILTON M. RUSSELL, Manager. ‘ 06 Produced by The Literary Digest, Distributed by W. W. Hodkinson Corporation, It is a mark of distinction to be a reader of The iterary Digest EMILY POST’S ETIQUETTE—“The Blue Book of Social Usage” FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, Publishers, 354-360 Fourth Avenue, New York : -' FOREGOES HIS “RED” IDEAS | A Jong and arduous fight for ad. mittance to citizenship on the part lof Conrad Jachter, a native of Ger. ,many, and a resident of the United | States since 1912, ended in federal lcourt Saturday, when he was ad- | mitted by Judge Jeremiah Neterer after considerable testimony had been gone over. ‘During the war Jachter, who fs at | present employed in Seattle as a | hardware workman, incurred the en- |mity of numbers of his acquaint. |ances by alleged utterances against |voluntary military service in the | United States army and thru his | reading and expounding “red” liter | ature. He explained to naturalization of- | ficers and to the court, however, that he had been reared in socialistic sur- roundings in his homeland, and that of late his ideas have changed until | the constitution of the United States November 10, 19: ruo is checking my bank ac- buck my balance has really and wish it were often will frequently make are he can, able to him. |" With regard to army service, Jach+ | ter declared his willingness to serve |the United States faithfully in any | branch of the military organization, | but said he would walt for the draft ‘tn the event of future wars. * to the American people to what she has Jabbing the Hard Coal Jobber There seems to be an impression in the minds of many leading editors thi he real culprit in the coal pile is the coal jobber or speculative wholesaler.” The Poison in Prohibition Moonshine “hard The dangers which confront people who drink liquor" these days. How France Feels Toward the Hughes Plan An examination of M. Poincare's statements, and opinions from tho British press, Selling 1,000 copies @ week! 630 i _ tions; $4.18, net urn one At every Bookstore in this city; of | appears reasonable and quite accept. ; _ ENGINE BLOWN... i | lof the persons who set off the exes» 0 é jie. er