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PAGE 8 || The Seattle Star ) (Mr. Harding Remembers a Promise Taking a group of editors assembled in New York by rise, President Harding hurled defiance at Senators s, Watson, McCormick, Johnson and the lesser lights Who would prevent the | States from entering the su World court. The president's fight for world court plan is developing into a two-fisted, bare kle affair Altho, ter fact, the court he pre we goin is a league of nations creation, the president de Sared emphatically that so far as the t of the league is Concerned, he “doesn't propose to enter, not by the Bide door, the back door, or the cellar door.’ 4 Very frankly the president told how he and his ad ~ ministration associates cast about for a means of carry dng out their 1920 campaign pledges for participation in #n international judicial tribunal or association and how F they finally decided upon the league world court becalse “the court was established and is functioning.” In fact, Sas Mr. Harding added, “an American judge sits on th "court, tho we had no part in choosing him.” The great service which the president’s speech re ndered ie the American people was to confirm officially the re- 3 to the effect that the administration party is split a... on international questions, with the Lodge- "Watson-Johnson “irreconcilable” faction of the senate metrically opposed to the Harding-Hughes-Hoover ship. Mr. Harding, in support of his world court plan, quotes from the republican campaign platforms of 1912, 1916 and 1920 to prove that he is consistent with party prom- ses when he proposes participation in the world court. Purthermore, he shows by the same method that the Me oligarchy, he i by Mr. Lodge, is faithless to ps __ promises when it attempts to block our entrance into the court. Tt is gratifying to have this inter-party fight brought into the light where the voters can see what js going Folks cannot help but be with him, when he says: I have indulged in the dream, nay, a justified hope, out of the encouraged and sustained court might ne the fulfillment of larger aspirations. In the proof ‘its utility and a spirit of concord among nations might that voluntary conference of nations out of which id be expected a clarified, codified international law )further assure peace under the law, and bring nations i understanding which is ever the first and best guar- of peace.” ty nA man does things is because he wants to, and the reason a does things is bécause. ‘fisherman is a man who thinks they have passed a law making all ‘wear muzzles. iy stung by « bee is considered good for rheumatism. Being stung ‘quack doctor is not ghtning never strikes twice in the same place because the same place never there. Another Endurance Champion @ are careers and careers. Some folks get into early and stick it out. Others wander around in il they hit something in which they fit. Long- persistency usually wins most, but, while per- tency is a virtue, we are presenting a letter addressed paper by a reader which indicates not only the issitudes of a career, but that virtue is not always its : d. Read: the papers are giving the championship for endurance spark- Sam Mirich, a Colorado rancher, who emigrated to Colorado, to Serbia for his girl, eloped to Germany, then to the U. 8., to Germany, returned to America and has just married her, 10,000 miles for her. Huh! Sam hasn't even the beginnings reared at Terre Haute, Ind., my folks spurring me on to a _eareer. Mary Jones lived five miles out from town. 1 drove hher every Sunday evening for five years—total 2,600 miles. The I was to get the license her folk« moved to Vancouver, and 3,000 miles. ‘Pip’ wiped out their chicken ranch in % and they moved to Southern California. 1 followed, being coops, anyhow—total 2,000 miles. They went in for lemons with me as private secretary to the hogs. Frost and cholera, family, etc. move to Oklahoma, where an uncle had oil 1,500 miles. The Jones oil wells proved dry. So did there was a move to a Georgia peach ranch—total 1,000 ‘One of those ‘unusual’ frosts killed all but three of the 800 peach trees, and there was a Jones emigration to Alberta, wheat fields—total 2,500 miles. Froze the big toes off both first winter. Decided that the Jones career was too darned @ man reared to be part of the literati and answered an ad— A going skunk ranch in Missouri; cheap'—total 2,000 miles, came on and married me. Grand total, 14,600 miles, You see, Mirich endurance sparking gtis nowhere with my record, ? i, by all the skunks in the Ozarks! Mary's suing me for divorce Feu ‘that I'm of a wandering disposition, staying out ec. there is authority there is a natural inclination to disobedi- iburton. you see a man’s face all scratched up now you never know if it eat or earrings. neck is what we get into trouble up to. Make It “Thou Shalt Not” iy 90 per cent of America’s 110,000,000 people want ( labor and minimum wage legislation. _ Five out of nine lawyers on the United States supreme pronounce such legislation unconstitutional and that the people shall not have it. mendment of the constitution is a long, tedious fhe constitution itself provides that “the supreme f shall have appellate jurisdiction both as to law fact, WITH SUCH EXCEPTIONS AND UNDER H REGULATIONS AS CONGRESS SHALL kK B,”” and Senator Borah and others would cure the stitution by a congressional act to prevent that-court’s fication of legislation unless seven of the nine justices ur. ybe such a special act would be a palliative, but will good lawyer please tell us why the court could not ire such special act to be unconstitutional, too? A that defies the whole people could not be expected itate over nullifying a@ mere congress bent on mak- it more difficult for that court to exercise its usurpa- ji of the legislative function. In such a case the only ck at congress’ command would be’ refusal to joney to pay the supreme court judges, in which the majority of them wight resign and return to the ation payrolls from which they were picked. palliative, or compromise, or mutual understanding what is needed. The issue is: Shall the United ates supreme court dictate what laws this democracy all not have? ‘That's the point. Trifling, half-way ures will not settle it. Let's write “That Court Not!” into the constitution, tho we grow old and fighting for it! ‘omen forgive more often than men. They have more chances, be more bachelors, ing to be # compliment, tHE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1928. Marathon Dancing Sure Wears Out the Partner STRAT By Berton Braley [ srE4x to nobody, nobe not And For how ANOTHER WAY esi scs°: TO LOSE CASH =: iCompany Even Offers Free ° 1» ve: lub has is ms of the el stock se These tra after bad. They might be Whose business is bi nobody, nobody, 4 i Postage to Do It ‘orm t tes Protect so I sit and read an awn TACOMA In my own ac ik A bally nul For the boys back East have al! Jon. Joute litle “reconstru plan’ al) SUBSCRIPTION H® hum, I'm fearfu m and they e written to| BLANK SENT | ee And the scenery that I see. scribers in Tacoma about ft.| And the subscription blank con-| But one must maintain one’s proper place In human society ‘ | anxious are the Eastern fellows! tains this stavement | One can't fake chances of meoting those now the helm of ‘the scuttled ship| “Pursuant to the terma of Steel that Tucormana continue to dec jsend in their dollars that they are! of said! Of humble or low degree So 1 speak to nobod And nobody speak: laration of irust, the subscriber t stad | ly agree t the trustee « wine 1 ble even furnishing addressed and] *Pressly ustes of Prcmacntes forage re e' Seissh lé tablets net Stina Head sald trust fi 5 addition to pyricht, 198 nal ty reusin thete, hesitti.ix: in a na 0 rake the g russ Reman ie ES Sea Cae ane ee ort Olive is a combinat | All the ‘Tacoma folks have to do ta] ‘B® Reneral 5 2 contained : iat : | = ioe field cate ‘& distressed, full a and not in ar limitation| MICE MAKE ROME MY GOSH! rich cream, olive oil and rare P ating soon dleageaaen | shove their money into the envelopes | and send It away seo it again! And they'll never| ‘hereof, ment and both tangi The appeal is being made in behalf Aron 26 ROME, Apr into an ¢lectr nd intangible of 1. It Steel Healty De. | causing & whort « {o J . R. Steel ». | ri a i i ae ta t ios Mary Lincoln | tinguished all the city lights } Mary Lir andy Co. a any and all etiivtaeb ttarea: in ted Corpor: | best judgment obtain the dis ADVERTISING CLUBS jations of sald m, purchase! sree of ution from re. | % ISSUE WARNING | recelvers’ corti or invest of | Saree % | deal int orporations, according aaets of any or all of the| celvership o nkrupley proceedings |r their! as the may be you The Tacoma better business bu \Man Enters Kitchen | as Wives Fly Out “Well, well, Jim! Gone tn for lit erature, have you? I didn’t know you were here till you haw-hawed Good,book you're reading, out loud. evidently.” “Hub? |Tom! Say, this in some book |that. The Stag Cook Hook. Have! Oh, there, at} yeah! Hello, lyou ever hankered to get out Into lout any womén folks around?” | “Have I? Yes; occasionally 1 think I'd like to take @ hand at it | to see how it goes.” | “Here, Well we aren't the onty hunch of that sort. This book ts| |full of reeipex written by men for} too. it seems that | men with a} jmen. Good stuff, Here's a good-| }looking mixture by Douglas Falr jbanks, Otis Skinner télla how to cook artichokes a new way, and Ir- yin Cobb and Charlie Chaplin have | Written down their favorite dishes jand, how to make ‘em.” | “Sounds good to me. The Stag {Cook Hook, is it? Say, by golly, I'm going to stop at the next book store and get that book. The wife is going | away over Sunday,, and she has| |been worrying about me. Vl get} alorig, all right, especially if you; and Bill and another man will come | up for a game of cards. We'll fix | up rome fancy dishes out of that| man's cook book and have tle kitch- en to ourselyen.” | “Lata go. I'm for tt. See you! Sunday, On my way to try on my! new suit now. Say, by the way, when you need some now clothes, if ever, let me advise you to visit Cherry's. 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The Port Olive Co. 316 8,|¥el re sold by all good does | Broadway, Los Angeles.—Advertise- | {045 bs Po 5 i ment ates Advertisement. servation of the milk teeth assures the correct coming-in of the second set. At the age of six the second teeth begin to appear. Vigorous brushing with a perfect cleansing agent, like | Kolynos, should be adhered to strictly, to prevent decay of the permanent teeth. Makes Kolynos Habit Permanent It will not take long for a child to form the per- manent Kolynos habit of keeping the mouth hygienically clean—of removing daily from teeth, tongue, gums and mouth membrane many millions of disease germs, which might otherwise, at various periods, interfere with his physical health. 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