PAGE e The Seattle Star Nt«ir*Nr V»> Am. ft*4 Vnllod Pf*M •orolo* By wall, mi »f Htr IN f«r m*ih: • m€nthm. 9i MH month*. |ftl; •k M In fho at at• of WkihlKflon Outotri* mf ih« «lai« l#c p*r MMillk |« It f*»r t moxihi <»r • »*« ir r \iy . ofrtwr cH » ||| • m«nth What Would Happen The Hughes navy limitation plan, to be solid, needs adequate insurance of peuce in the Pacific to take place of absolutely American naval dominance. This means that England must meet us half way in the Far East issue. Hut England cannot meet us at all while she has an exclusive Japanese alliance, or any other private and exclusive alliance However, if England gives up the Jap alliance, and the hulk of her navy at the same time, she, too, will need insurance for the sake of Canada. Australia and New Zealand. These two "insurance policies" may become the arms conference problem. Constitutionally. America may not be able to make an "alliance" with a foreign power. Rut one diplomatic stroke that America has made stand for the last 20 yearn •nd that England, with the rest of the world, has been able to bank on, was the Hay doctrine of the "open door" in. and the integrity of, China. Also the Hay doctrine was evolved primal ily on the "American first" principle. It opposed domination of China by any one foreign power. America today is just as vitally intereMted in the security of Canada, Australia and New 7ealand as she was 20 years ago in the integrity of China, and on the Name grounds. Could not, then, the two insurance policies spoken of above, be combined into one tf Mr. Hughes would restate the Hay dostrine so as to include Canada, Australia and Mew Zealand as well as China as countries the invasion of which America would resist? Great Britain solemnly publishing a similar "doctrine" for China and the dominions, would make a pledge as binding as our open door doctrine has been. These two would constitute the required insurance making possible redaction of ar guments by America and Britain. And the ending of the British-Japanese alliance. The Japanese, then, could make a third, dovetailing proclamation or not, as they chose. At aO events the Pacific and the interests of all peaceful people interested would be as secure as outspoken diplomacy can make it That is all the American people want. Mr. Hughes, who has already taken one bold step, may be sure the country will back him in another, if he takes it in the open so that they can know it is along the road they want to go—the road away from war. The particular "road away from war" discussed above was not discovered in a news paper office. It is the basis of much talk, official and otherwise, in Washington today. World* m Drieat Spot Tk* Meat pUrr la the world to fvU, Pern. It expects n® rata ■M it leant IMX If H nlm •timer than ran In twa 7 ran <■■■ Uwrr, the ntllnt pi mML Last February tt hW iu flnrt ikMnr torn It IS. Daapito Um try rlh»ato. mm Mmml kinds sf ptaal life man to exist aixrand Fayto. Ufe, the greatest ajile;. b rrmarfc aMe for twe riamiwhlitt FIRST: lla KiMw mad toaa dw fl|M against Mk. SICOND: Ito pmr to adapt Mf to any hind et ro- Lior* there ■ aura irtl» rlotkrt m mm. tcho never to hi mar f 4ntK mourn, this is my own, my only mu. If say of our future ronvictt art trivtssp t«iM. Nature ? * Balance The hop apbia haa IM children U thnea a year, aaya the hraith ■ lull a institute. If all these lived and multlphrd at the aaae rata, IB a year's lime the 12th genera te* af children would tatal It •astmens— I* with W written after It seven thnea. But I hey last Bve. Birds eat moat of Nature keeps her machinery af ■fe finely balanced, one preying ea another, each form of life with another form of life con stantly attacking H. Winter may come and winter may go, but tkirts get Ibarter for- Mcr. When your shirt comes hark With buttons gone—thrrr « (be rub. A man has never gone to ihe devil unta he is dead. About the only thing the new Wirth cabinet paste« U criae*. It is hard to get a too man to oaa Of these big shoe sales. Roem s 1 ~ ■i&aaD.Ro..o.k from Child* Harold, CaaL IV. BY GEORGE GORDON BYRON I alood In Venice, on the Rrldce of Sighs; A pal ace and a prlaon on each hand: I n* from but the wave her structures rid* As from the stroke of the enchanter'* wand: A thousand years Ihelr cloudy win*-, expand Around me. and a dyln* glory smiles O'er the far times, when many a subject land Ix>oked to the winged Uon's marble piles, Where Venice sat In etate. throned on her hundred tales! Try This on Your Wise Friend These letters, properly arranged, make a popular proverb: aaaeeehlioorsssswyy. What is it? Anxwer to yesterday's: A man I* always nearest to hi* wife. One or two local loafers are trying to get into the navy now. XJiey overheard someone talking about that "ten-year naval holiday."—Lyndon Tribune. The learned man who discovered the race is growing taller may have been watching his small son. Broadway chorus girls have started making their own tights. It seems they were almost out of them. Senator Watson says he is outspoken. Wc can't imagine who did it • Our platform is fireproof stogies. Next: Rubber Pavements The nest step forward la imi building may be rubber para menia, nit grata 11m l,ondsn Times. A rubber pavement with sufficient elasticity would enable lata* ta rua wltboat Urea. Naund* like aa impoaalbia *ug (ration. Bat all rrvalutlonary changes aeeai that way whan first pcs^osed. Inventor* ihadi at leaat, try to pccfftl rubber aidewalk*. That wauld be a boon ta bam an nerve*, dally getting mere highly strung In civilisation. "After international disarmament what*" null the IHgest. We would lay "local disarmament." How We Americans Talk! The telepbooe wires In tntted Htalea would make 1M unbroken telephone Uaee from the earth ta the moon. Over those wire*, Americana dally carry on 33.Mt.tM phone conversations. Vet it la only 45 yrara wince the telephone waa In vented. The only arguments some people listen to are their own. VENICE rwhtehMi naftr hy Tho lUr wuohi«« o*. Pfcoi** Mftla MR j Wonderful for Dessert I | Another New-Flavored Ice Cream J for Special Week-End Sale ■ fl After the big Thanksgiving dinner and its I 1 usually heavy dessert, you will find Snoqual- mie Brick, the new-flavored special of the Seattle Ice Cream Company, a delightful I change for dessert. ■ ■ Snoqualmie is different from last week's I ■ special—different from all other Ice Cream M t flavors. Only a limited quantity is made for week- U J end sale. Better phone our nearest dealer ■ ■ and reserve a brick for tomorrow or Sunday. . I ■ If you don't know our dealers, phone Main r— M B 6225 for the name of one. SEATTLE ICE CREAM COMPANY kHp J For More Than SO Years Producers of - V ICETream -Jj- TFIE SEATTLE STAR LETTERS TO EDITOR The Community Chest Rdttor The Rtsr: They any that the Community Cheat la unfilled, and I am offering a suggestion which 1 hope may be of u*e Many of our beat cltlsens are glv Ing their time and money to thl* pause and atlll It lags. Ho I atn ail drnx Ing this letter to thoae who would give If Uiey could be Ht!llK. and Utla la my suggestion: l»o not permit your suspicion of any one of theae orgHnlaatlon* repre aente**> luifly corrwl Thla fl'Partnwfil baa employed """ expended much money from the pvbllc funda thai waa unwarranted I'oaltiona have been created and Oiled by politlciana and It cainnot be ahown where they hava earned one (Ingle dollar for the port At the preaent tlma we ara paying ItW per month for Ihm icnU on tha Houlh Knd terml tuUa whan there ahould be only one at |JM par month. At othar placa reductiona could ba made accord ingly. Thara to Joat ona thine to do and that la to hlra an egperlenced gen ami manacr and pay him a aalary comm> naurata with tha aervkwe to b* rendered. Ha muat ba A mail arhn will not atop to feel out tha pollUcml altuatlon bafora making a mora. Ha muat Atoo be big enough to not llatan to every littla whim of tha commlealoner* regarding put ting on polltkml henchman It would poaaibly ba battar to obtAln tha eervtcea of •otna man from mow othar port, tha aim a* l\>rtland And AAtorto hava dona. We can Afford to pay from t>O.AO4 to tlt.ooo par yaar to tha right man and thla man would not only aave hla aalary many tlmaa par yaar In eliminating dead wood And naeleaa poeltiona. but would ba big enough to take mat tera up arlth tha railroad oompAnlea. tha ateamahlp oompanlea, broker*, etc, to maka thla port an liwlltu- Uon that tha people would ha proud tmchlng* In comparison with all who had |onf bffoff that "ffwrt* all thing* new," fend 1ln«« who are stunned and alrkcned by rumor* of graft *ml abuse* In any certain agency should give ss they see fit- Hut give It! fur the principal thin* In to alleviate want unci suffering Then wi* Khali be In a |ioeltlon not to Judge the amused organlsatlona unheard, but to make that will aerve to lift the shadow from the fine men and women who really are blamels*s and to punish those, If ! any, who are at fault. If the Com imunlty Chest prove* to be a practli-sl menn* of distributing help to th«- needy, It will (given tlfnei prove Itaelf ami win the approval of all In the meantime, let u« all be more concerned with giving our mite than with the doubt and rancor occasioned by rumor* K U. of—getting cargoea thru here that would not only pay the operating e*per.*es, but have a surplus to take cars of bond Interest and bond redemption. IVi any of our banks pick up a politician and make him prealdent fl A DR. J. It. BIVYON Free Examination BEST $2.50 CUSSES on Earth W« irt on* of the few optical lt»rM HI (fee NMtkVNI thai grind ImiM frum atari to fmlah. and we are the only on* In •kattlm—ow rmrr avk. Ktaininatlon free, by irt'utlr <«p -iMNtrlij OMMM ti'l |'' -r . !/• J unl-«» abeolutrl/ nw»u'r BINYON OPTICAL CO. ma riM»T *>k. IHwm* •»rta« u4 Haw COAL Imp. delivered $».50 K« N«I. delivered . •10.00 Coking Coai, delivered fIO.BO lirier Iflll Coal luweat In aah. Moat heat for your moaay No cllnkara or bone. BIIEI RILL COAL CO. Ml Terry A»m«f N. I'hona t apltol Ull. ~— • iid rtmiiMjrrr of th* Institution. or do they rho»mr a mart who hua grnwn up arid had year* of «-ipert enn* in lh* different department* before Kivtrm him a position in whl<*h ha would control the finan re*? If aemm to m«" tnut the bu»l ONE FESTIVE DAY nv lIK WM. K. BARTON K have an Inrreas 111K number of nitlonil holi day* If we take wamlnt I r i m Kuroiintn ©Gun tries, we shall have occasion to remind ouraelvea thai It I* "-""y for a nation to load Itself up with more holidays m, mm. JP ihnn It can really afford. It Is easy to proclaim a holiday In honor of almoxl anytiody. and there are In every country rreat numliers of people who wl»h that all days were holidays. As yet America ha* not too many of them, and they are sufficiently distributed and diversified to Insure their per manence If only Oeorge Washington and Abraham Lincoln had l>e«-n content to lie I*irn In different months. we should have no congestion of holi days In any part of the year. Hut we must havs lut something quits the reverse. It Is a day of tender and solemn memories The Kourlh of July I* not festive, tho the old fsshloned picnic dinner gave It some thing of that character Christmas Is a day of rift IswtowaJ and the New Year Is supposed to ta». and ought to Im. a day when men resolve to he hetter, for we need such dsys llut Thanksgiving Is a day of i feasting and good cheer Now. the Puritans were little given to holidays. They did not observe Christmas or Kaater, and they had no Washington or IJncoln to com memorat*. snd they hsd no Inde pendence day or Memorial day. Hut they created one holiday, and to It gave full expression of their char acter. Haa It ever occurred to you that our only really festive holiday. In a list otherwise rather formidably dignified and solemn. Is a legacy from the inintans? They were solemn people Anybody I would havs hern solemn In their situation, snd they were solemn by ronvtrtion snd habit. nut when the* ordained a holiday, they made Doirt slick. i . -wkh.'die prunes? | WHO WA> pUytng rtnlw, IN THK back at tka Wl.'tT (L—MEa AMONO THc'oakloQ. • a a a AND THK mm WNO HAD }ort Jmri lb Kit , * ' aa a v •AID -»l Lbara'i A —>!■!<, a a a WAITIir OUT Croat" a a a AND »1 Mid IkM| Ia a a IF YOtTLL kMf (iW, ■tail Hru to wm*rr a a a now Htnraa»Mc)«a%. ' a a a WHIN A goad tktafe a a a HAFPKNE ALONO. ~. f a a a fe DOfTT LEAVE Rto Qmrw, r TO ORAB tha rrmrx, a a a nUNETANCE IF. YOU HEAR fit kMMI a a a OH READ itat% wita. THAT REALLY doaa mom THAN PLEASE tha tuU. | YOUR •TEPPINO ut WITH THE* otkar lira oaaa. [_ AND EAYINQ right oaL Yon-LL_ rr ~~~>~l "QIMME A pack ot ««d> #•*»*. •«** krt a a a full-bodiod tobacco goodnaaa. THOSE CIOARETTEE. You'ra right, too, bacauaa they a < * don t maka othar eigarattaa Ilka THAT EATItFY."* rhaatwflaWa. Tha Chaatarflald a a a Wend cant 6* oojnad. Chesterfield CIGARETTES f Ltoorrr & Mm* Tobacco Ca cfclaWfaU 1 j neaa and admlnlalintlon »' " **" { ahould he conducted the mtmr ** any other bllflMti Involving the Um of a* large a rapltal I have been connected with the Port of Keattle sine* Its creation month* before th«- flrrt fill** w.i* driven, and when I aay that •' time alnee the creation of this port dUlrlrt up to the present time lia* the i*it nptritM) a* loosely and In ••ffi< lently, I believe I know whereof I apeak W, H LINCOLN, fort Commlasloner. It a happy one, and they have given iia our only holiday that la definitely dedicated to Joy, They Intended to do It ao. Thanks giving with them wan not almply » day of religious ohMnruict. Op that day Mllea Htandlah drilled his men. and they performed feats of military akIII. and the Indiana played their game* and taught them to the I'urt tana. The Indiana went out and ahot throe deer, and the Pilgrim* killed turkeya, and they had a great feast- Wl know that there were religious otstorvanres; the very name of the day la sufficient proof of that, but the day waa not wholly given over to ■ eliglous celebrstlons. It waa a day of athletic a porta, a day of happy festivity. There were elemenU that were aomlwr In the Uvea of the Puritan*. Hut from them we have our one festive holiday. Thanksgiving la a feaat. It waa ao from the begin ntaur- Hut, If the Puritans did not omit mirth and rood rheer and feasting and athletics from their Thankagtv- Ing. no more ahould we omit thank fulness from oura. One day In the year la none too many for men and women to cultivate the blessed grace of gratitude Dyed Her Wrap, Skirt Sweater, and Draperies Kvery "l«am«nd L)yaa" package telte how to dya or Uot any worn, faded garment or drapery a new rich color that will not fitreuk. a pot. fade or run. Perfect home dyeing la guaranteed with Diamond I (yea even If you have never dyed before. Juat tell your druggtot whether the material you wtoh to dye to wool or altk. or whether It to linen, cotton, or mixed gooda For fifty one yearn ml I Dona of women have been ufilng "Diamond Dyea" to add yean of wear to their old. ahabby watati% ■klrta dreaaea. ooata. rweatera, atorklngm. draperies, hanging*, every, thing*— Ad vertlaemenL ftitdav, NQVKMP.r.n -zr>. 1021. "The partner* ahall walk thra* atepa |tirwkr| then make a proper turn. They "hall be a te»pectabl« dlatance apart, their bodies »<•( touching, the arm* held straight out, not bent " Chief of Police, Itelllngham. Wash. liear Chief I a|K-nt a day or an In Ftelllngham a while ago. and m your local pitj»er* mw a copy of your dancing law. I thought I'd Ilk* to have a dance, but wondered- ahoulfl I take the chance? Kor I'm a law abiding guy, and hold our leglalatlon high but even ao, I inuat admit, I broke your law a little bit- a breakage wht>h thef tell me pay* a hundred bucka ant thirty daya! My own Intentlona all were good, I really did the beat I could, I took three etepe and then I found | couldn't turn myself around, and ao I took another one—and then Lb# awful crime waa done! And thua It waa the die waa eaat, I waa a criminal at last? And after that, I blunh to (date, my forwarfl atepa were all or eight: beidde*, be fore the dance waa thru, I bent ay arm a tlrcv» or two' The law saya "hold 'em far away," and aa to that I'd like to aay. If yon yourself ahould ever go and "trip the light fantastic toe." I'll bet a twenty-dollar lid. you'd hold 'em Just the way I did' BROTIIKIUIOOI) OK MAN PTTNI Thin dcparUncnl »(wpt« contrtbd tiona for charily In any amount. U appreciation of your help. Avrldfl Mann will »end you a wpeclal l«tfl —alrnM 'n' everything—which J rail* a membership d««rr«e In "Tw LoyaJ Brotherhood of Man" 1 All undernl*ned contribution* wfl he iwnt to the Heatlle I'ommunll Cheat fund. Thou* who preftr I make a direct contribution to • aped fled charity, rather than thru ttl Community Client, may m ftpedfg and their contrlbutiona will be mJ u directed. Prerloualy acknowledged: Community Cbewt fund Ml WaeMnfton CfcUtfren-, Boom., it NaJvaOon Army 14 Krther Home )J Humane Society 1.9 Today'■ nubMTtpti-xM: Community Cheat fund— Mr and Mn. C. B. Carpenter $ t.N Mr*. Henry N*Me |jj a