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‘Reckless Drivers Are Given Policeman’s Angle _ KANSAS CITY, Kan, Nov, 28 “wrattic offenders serving as traffic a men! >A bit unusual, to be sure, they are doing it hero, For Polico Judge H, 8, Roberts ts Werting reckless drivers into care- il drivers by teaching them the po- n’s side of It. Tnstead of fining or jailing traffic: violators, Judge Roberts is send- them to school, Persons, con- in his court, are required to hd classes so many nights, | The traffic code is studied, and Jes- are given in careful driving. are required to become letter. in the city ordinances before are “graduated” and permitted to resume driving. ‘And a part of the course ts traffic Fegulation. Offenders are required “£0 gO to busy downtown corners and yndie vehicular and pedestrian traf: fio for periods ranging from half an our to an hour, Seeing the danger of speeding, “cutting in” and other form of care- driving gives Judge Roberts’ pu- B new conception on the order Yet Believe me,” says one young man ‘who has just finished his course, going to help the police all I in the future. c er, I'll drive slowly and lly at all times. I learned a gut there on that corner. And & fine wouldn't have taught half as much.” So their friends and hangers-on 't jeer at his pupils, Judge Rob- ts always arranges to have police- on hand on the corners where @ fellows are “doing tim 2 Free of Charges Because the information filed > Eee them declared the offense man ts occurred in Seattle, Gichard and Martin Kur- ufacture and possession of ' were freed by Federal Judge | & FP. Case of Port Townsend al- )eged the offense occurred in that town and ‘smissal followed when “Assistant U, 8. District Attorney J, W. Hoar explained that the in- formation was in error, the name “Seattle” being printed on the forms used. The doors of St. Peter's at Rome @re maze of cypress and have last- ed 1,100 years. WEAK RUNDOWN AND AILIN E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Brought Relief When Other Medicines Failed Winston-Salem, N. C.—“I was weak and wn and had trouble with my side. had taking med- icine for a long time and nothing seemed to do me yen good. My id went to) the | J. best medicine you have for women’s troubles. 'He gave him a bottle of dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- aa and it has helped me. Ina short 1 was able to do my housework, ‘and now I am not only able todoevery bit of that and washing and ironing, but I help my husband at the store. <Mrs. L. K. Myers, 1409E. 14th St., Winston-Salem, N.C. Feels New Life and Strength Keene, N. H.—“I was weak and Fun-down and had backache and all Gorts of troubles which women have. I found great relief when taking Lydia E. Hinkham's Vegetable Com- | sea and I also used Lydia E. Pink- ’s Sanative Wash. I am able to do my work and feel new life and erent from the Vegetable Com- "—Mrs. A. F, Hammonp, 72 Street, Keene, N. H. as A Timely Warning Many remedies for COLD, GRIP end iri ENZA are dangerous, as they dry up the secretions, instead Of Maquefying them, thus causing gongestion and often resulting Serious complications. JOYNER’S Cold, Grip and Influenza Capsules gontain no aspirin, acetanilid, Sar products, or other heart de ants, or dangerous or hab of any kind. Th Grip and Influenza quickly, Met as a disinfectant and ge! stroyer, and tend to prevent b: er-eff which are likely tc follow the Fiu, such as kidney and bladder in coal a- gaving the sufferer weeks 6d much expense. TAKE 6* id recommended by all good ar, or sent prepaid on of 60c a box. by the mfrs., Joyner Drug Co., Spokane, Washing- ton. For a ple hb tROLE LOB! nd $1.09 bott de a Get Two Trial Boxes PAZO OINTMENT is a Guaran- teed Remedy for all forms of Piles. Pay your druggist $1.20 for two boxes of PAZO OINTMENT. When you have used the two boxes, if you are not satisfied with the results obtained, we will send $1.20 to your druggist and request him to hand it to you. We prefer to handle this through the druggist because his cus- tomers are usually his friends and will be honest with him. PARIS MEDICINE COMPANY, St. Louls, Mo. e h Neterer Tuesday, Sheriff] ably the mont scientific, log BY H, M, SAYRE ‘The last great influonce on the sure | face of the oarth has been gaciation jover wide areas, especially in North America and Burope, Over much of the northern pertion of the United States the topography has changed vory, very little since the glacial pe. riod, Keven this “last minute’ In history is placed at from 60,000 to 120,000 yoars ago by the best authorities, with the more recent estimates tending to the longer time, Washington was not covered by one great ieo-sheet as wero Central and Eastern Canada and Northern United States. The mountains were covered by snowfields from which the glaciers moyed slowly down the valleys to spread out in broad, fan. shaped lobes in the lowlands betow. The cause of a glacial epoch is stul a subject of controversy among geologists, Many theorles have been advanced to explain the phenome. non, Two conditions must be ac- counted for; namely, a lowering of temperature over a long period of time and an tnerease tn annual ratn- fall (includes snow), Many books have been written on the subject and it is impossible to go into the discussion here, THREE SYSTEMS OF GLACIERS Extensive glaciation took place thruout the Cascades and the Qym- Dies and at its maximum the ice coy- ered much of the valley between the two ranges. Puget sound at that time was a broad valley with a river system flowing off to the North, As| more severe, the valley glaciers were enlarged, reaching further and fur ther out into the Puget valley. Three systems of glaciers descend- ed into the valley, One came from | the Cascades on the east, one from | the Olympics on the west and the | third flowed down from north | in the vaLey between Vancouver | island the mainland of British Co-| lumbia, These all joined and at the | climax of the cold period formed a| tremendous body of ice, filling the | valley at the present site of Ad- miralty inlet to the depth of about | 2,500 feet or more, | The snow caps and valley glaciers | had a decided effect on the moun. | |tains, Glacial scu.pture (see article [on the Olympic mountains) rough jened the ranges to a large extent, }leaying the peaks sharp, the ridges Jungular and jagged and the valleys | broad and U-shaped. Naturally, huge | Quantities of material were trans | ported by the ce from the moun- |tains to the valley, This was In the }form of huge boulders, all grades, |sizes and shapes of smaller rocks, | | BOND ISSUE IS FOUGHT le the Municipal league wa. condemning the proposed hond fasuc {Of $3,000,000 with which to finance construction of @ civic auditorium, the auditorium eo of the Chamber of Commerce was urging | the clty council to act, The Municipal league report cited advice from Corporation Counsel T. L. Kennedy's office, stating only | $817,000 can be raised by bonds be. fore the bonded indebtedness limit jbas been reached. ‘The chamber committee, at its | meeting in the Merchants’ Ex- | change, Arcti¢ building, voted unant jmously for the plag which would finance it with the issuance of $800, 000 of generai fund bonds and by raising $200,000 from eltizens gen- erally, wi Liquor Raid Made Near City Offices Two men and a quantity of moon. shine liquor were taken by the po. lice Tuesday, in a raid upon 608% Third ave., directly across from the county-clty building, at the north. east corner of James st. and Third ave. John Handley and W. J. Hand. ley were arrested, charged with IIle. gal possession of liquor and five gallons of moonshine and several bottles seized. Rupture Kills | 8,000 Annually } Eight thousand persons each year jare laid a the burial certificate! ‘Rupture.” Why? fortunate ones had he un themselves or had been |- y taking care of the sign (swelling) of the affliction and pay. ne ention to the cause. What! are you dolng? Are you neglecting urself by wearing & truss, appl ance, or whatever name you’ choose to call It? At best, the truss {fs oniy @ makeshift—a false prop against collapsing wall—and. canner et act as more than a mere support. The binds retards blood cireulatiae thus robbing the pap kened muse! that which they need "mo ishment. re But actence has found a way, anc every truss mufferer in the land ie [invited to make @ FREE test right h the privacy of their own’ ee The PLAPAO method Is unanent tnt: al and for rup-| successful nelf-treatment \ture the world has ever known | The PLAPAO P. h te AD 4 when adhe: the body ihis cannot possibly therefore | neh. Soft an vol- inexpensive. ‘To you work and whilat ps, buckles or ow to close the herni opening as nature intended #o rupture CAN'T come down. Sen. ur name today to PLAPAO GO, ) 1, St. Louis, Mo. for FREB jal Plapao and the information Advertisement necessary. Piles Gan Be Cured y | clip this ftem and © anid Addrese to Dr ow Sanitarium, Kau tisement, Mo.—Adver GEOLOGICAL HISTORY OF WASHINGTON—NO, 7 The Glaciers One of the most recent great changes Tens of Thousands of Years Ago at That Three Great Systems at Work Some Small Iee Masses Still Remain glacial conditions became more and! fare the direct or indirect result of |ous points along the valleys sand and finely ground “rock four’; it was carriod on top of tho tee, frozen within the moving mass and rolled along beneath It, DROPS LOA . JUMBLED MAS: The warming of the climate was as slow or slower & process as tho cooling. The leo gradually melted in the main, yalley and the glaciers be gan to retroat into the mountaln valleys whence they had originated, What beeame of all this material whieh the tee carried? It was dropped as the fee meted, some of it as a jumbled mass Joft directly by the ico; other portions were effected by water melting at the edge of the tee, and the remainder was carried away by the streams which drained the margin of the glaciers, It in in evi dence everywhere today—this glacial “UlL’ as it is called-—and forms some of the most striking surface deposits, Now, what have we left of all this vast ice which must have moved for many thousands of years down from the mountains to accumulate In the big valleys? Perpetual snow sti, ites in the high valleys in the heart of the ranges, This is above what is called the snow line and repre sents the altitude above which the summer molting does not equal (or exceed) the winter snowfall. Glaciers, or rather the remnants of former) flaciers, exist in the valleys on the sides of the highest peaks. The great votcanoes Rainier, 8% Helens, Ad- ms, Baker, ete, carry the best ex:| moples. Those which radiate from} the summit of Rainier are perhaps the best known, for they represent) finest existing glacier system in} the United St 5 | RAINIER GLACIERS } FEED FOUR RIVERS ‘Tho summit of the mountain Ia al-| most buried tn a field of granular snow which extends down 2,000 feet from the rim of the crater, For about 5,000 feet below this the ice cascades occur like huge, frozen wa. | torfalls, sometimes making vertica! descents of some distance, Ton large slacters having many tributary toe streams flow down the valleys from the foot of these cascades. Four Im portant rivers have their source in these glaciere—the Cowlitz, which flows Into the Columbia; the Nisqual ly, Puyallup and White rivers, which flow directly into Puget sound. Along the higher peaks of the Cas eades are found many tiny glaciers clinging, it seems, to the very aides of the cliffs, and moving for short distances down the steep, scarred val loys, These are all that remain of the great glacier system which we have reconstructed from the deposits in the valleys, The thoysanda of Jakes which en hance the scenery of the mountains glaciation. The ice, in retreating up the valleys and depositing the load of sediment which it carri formed large dams of this material at yar! The mountain streams bave not yet cut away these and it is the com. mon thing to find a.chain of small lakes in the high valleys ASPIRIN Say “Bayer’- Genuine! Genuine Pirin” have millions clans over Colds and gripp misery. Handy boxes of twelve table cost only few cents at any drugstore. Each package contains proven directions for Colds and tells how to prepare an Aspirin gargle for sore throat and tonailiti “Bayer been prescribed twenty-three Tablets of As proved safe by by physi- years for| ts SureRelief FOR INDIGESTION @ \ Hot water Sure Relief DELL-ANS | 25¢ ard 75¢ Packages Everwhere “ASK DR. MACY Seattle's Lending Special iat, 20th year. Ve, ear. nose, throat, lange, storm ach, intestinal, allmen Heart, BLOOD, Kid Kheamatism. Piles enred without knife. — Uloers. All pus conditions. Pal vie ailmenta, Ali skin a diseases. Paralysis, Bronchitis, Asthma, Nervous disorders and all weaknesses. GLANDULAR THERAPY. New Era Glagnosis and treatment. Men and wom- en. Consultation Is free | 1504 Third Ave.. Corner Pike St —Blood TEST ABRAMS METHODS Free » take have is th We day TTLE INSTITUTE OF ELECTRONIC REACTIONS 611 Third Ave, }in the | treasury ‘ THE SEA JOHNSON FIRES OPENING SHOTS Challenges : Administration on European Stand CHICAGO, Nov, 28.Hiram Jobn- son's political guna, which last night fired the opening shots of his cam- paign for the republican nomination for president, were aulet today, awalting (he answorlog volley of his opponents, Johnson's national political head: quarters in a prominent downtown hotel today were practically desert ed, Spokesmen for the California sonator said there would be “noth ing doing for a time, at least In @ speech forma)ly declaring the platform on whieh he will go beforo the people, Johnson chal: longed the administration of Prest dept Coolidge to explain the advan tages of American participation in Kuropean affairs, pleaded vigorous ty for a soldiers’ bonus, agricultural relief, reduction of the, income tax on incomes under $10,000 and at. tacked the supreme court for ite ruling on the women’s minimum wage law, SAYS BRITAIN WANTS , AMERICAN A Referring 40 the recent attempt to get the United States into a reparations conference, Senator Johnson said “What Great Britain wants ts to get America’s money and man power back of the conference, If Germany refused to pay, Lloyd George and others would have expected us to ald march to Berlin,” he paid. “Nothing will so quickly destroy a party and undermine confidence in @ goverament as broken promises,” said Senator Johnson, referring to the soldiers’ bonya. “If we had pot intended to pasg the so-called bonus law, we should have sald #0. We de ferred doing what we promised to do. I have before me figures of the If the figures ure correct we nay do ‘our duty by the poidiers and sull reduce taxation,” he de- clared. Speaking on the farmers’ problems, Sonator Johnson said; “Our farmers have suffered from intrigues in the market, They have suffered from manipulations and rail road charges, They have suffered from the failure of-our government to secure on behalf of thelr co-operw tive marketing societies a fair and full opportunity ef development and advance, URGES RELIEF FOR FARMERS atesmen now {n many cases sunde the farmer that is is a league of nation other preposterous and futile 4 of expanding markets, while the time the difficulty ts that s from those supposed ex kets would, in present cir- £0 not to him but to or son moth al the prof! ties now confront mers, our dome: esent condition and the of our raitroads thene matters, indeed, are worthy of lour closest attention gnd they will} change to modern have it,” ho sa RUM RUNNERS NOT WORRIED HALIFAX, N, 8, Nov, 24.—Every time the prohibition enforcement of- fictals figure out a new way to stop the rum runni tho latter furnish something else to figure on The Anglo-American agreement, if one is reached, to permit arrest of smugglers outside the threemile limk, will not worry the run run mers, they sald, The proposed agree ment would apply to vessels flying the British fag. All the smugglers will have to do, according to weal shippers, who know thelr ways, is to change the registry of thelr vessels to Fronch, Brazilian, Argentine, Panamanian, or something else, Most liquor smugglers are de clared to be Américana who havo| bought or chartered British ships under dummy companies for rea sons that have been sufficient up until the present. If the British flag loses its protective power along rum row, the rum runners will change to @hother registry, it is Radio in England Heard in America | cL LAND, Ohio, Nov. 38 Across 4,000 miles of ether, the mes. sage "America, are you getting un?" was heard threo times Tuesday night in Cleveland by Fred P. Herke, jr, a radio enthusiast According to Herke the message came from statjon SIT, Birmingham, England, 2 styles of Quaker Oats — One New / TTLE STAR Why Have Our People Teens Also Would Like your, Pe man in his early twen fi, Tho mother daughter will ket If @ Miyear-old peon” til all hours of tho night, what whall an old fashioned mother do about 1? If #ho will keep company with a young man of any port of character, Just so he in & good sport and has an auto, what ia she to do? If she in- wists on golng to parties and dances and returning #arly in the a, m, how can an old-fashioned mother stop her? Sho, the mother, foes on to eay: “Our home at ono time was an idoa!, happy home, but since these ideas bave come into my daughter's head it is one continual discord, 1 wish some reader could advise me, I have talked kindly to her, I have entertained her friends in our hom, I have done everything possible, but Just get sassy, ugly talk back from her in return,’* The young man writes: “Why have peop changed so in such a fow years? "It peema to me that since the war the outlook of young people and their view of life has changed a great deal. Before the war a young man or, woman did .not care to travel with the speed of a bullet, have the dash of a feudal knight, or the gallantry of an ancient Roman, Today things are differ. ont—yes, decidedly 0, Girls, boys, young and old, like to travel-—and believe mo they travel fast, “Tam in my early twenties, have twice traveled around tho old globe, am wel] posted to say that the young people of this Seattle town surely step with the best (or the wort) of them. Vico—I'l! may there in vice, and @ person doesn't have to look far at that, It ts as wide open as Moynt Vesuvius after an eruption. “All of a sudden I seem dumb to you tho ways of the world, Can explain to me thin wudden ch jot people, from @ happy, home-tc ing group, to a barbarous, drink murdering bunch of ‘boose-loving’ souls?” How about it, folks— | there's the evidence, but what jis the true verdict? | There are some who blame thia terrific change on the war. They claim there is |auch a reaction after any |great disaster, Still others lay the blame to prohibition —a law that is on our statute} but is all too lazly en- Still others lay this books, | boo d. for plays, automobiles, ete, ? It would perhaps be quite absurd to lay the entire |blame to any one of these things, but all of them to-| gether may be to blame for WOMEN! DYE OWT Sweaters Waists Draperies | Skirts Dresses Ginghams Coats Kimonos Stockings Diamond Dyes Each 15-cent package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint any old, worn, faded thing new, even if she has never dyed before. Choose any color at drug store, 2 ASK tor Horlicks | \ The ORIGINAL Malted Milk B® Avoid Imitations—Sabstitutes Make Your known. Cook: thin an that co a Happy, Home-Loving Group, to a Barbarous, Drinking, Murdering Bunch of “Booze-Loving” sows, Asks Young Man—Mother of Girl in Her BY CYNTHIA GREY Here are two letters that we should ponder over. One is! m from the mother of a 17-year-old girl. The other, from a puri HINGS NEW cooks in 3 to 5 minutes groce! Oats—QUICK Quaker Oats, For a hot breakfast quick, ask for QUICK QUAKER scarcely longer than simple toasted bread. Same plump oats as regular Quaker Oats. But cut before flaking, rolled very All that rare Quaker flavor, All the joy of kot breakfasts without bother or delay, Suddenly Changed From to Know. ties, liarly enough they ask practically the same question: What is really the matter with the young people today? Cynthia Grey will, receive call. ers on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 1 to 2 p, m, and on Tuesday and Thursday trom 11 to 12 & m, at her office in The Btar Bldg, 1309 Seventh ave. this muddled state of affairs. Who would take the re- sponsibility of giving one concrete reason? o- Which t# the largest building In the world? What is its capacity. And {ts nize? The General Motora building in Detrout, This dullding has space There are $0 space, containing about 1,600 of- Four miles of corridors con~ nect the various “sections of the building. for 600 people, acres of floor eve Does cholera cause many deaths among hogs in the United States? Yes, approximately four per cent of the hogs on farma in the Unit- ed Btates dig of cholera, oe In the manufacture of cornstarch An important industry in the Unit- od Btates? What is it used for? Fifty million bushels of corn are used to make cornstarch each year. In addition to being used for food, cornstarch is used for many tech- nical purposes, In the food indus- try cornstarch finds te greatest use aa the bass for the manufac- ture of corn syrup or glucose; it ts employed by confectioners in mak- ing gumdrops, by cooks in thick- ening sauces and making custards, Confectioners also use tt for forma into which soft candy is poured in making bonbons. Large quantitles are used in the manufacture of baking powder and ple fillers, It te cleo an dmportant ingredient in Do you know the story of Junior Moreland, who, having every- thing, lost all? Don’t put off the real treat of reading The White » Flag Gene Stratton-Porter $2, everywhere Doubleday, Page & Co. } | | | ESSE MAK TRAVEL BY 8T.uB Portland Daity Fare 10:15: $6.50 || MOTOR BUS DEPor || 1918 Third Avenue PHONE ELLIOTT 1401 {One X-Ray Free] In the extraction of teeth we say to our patrons: If we hurt you, don’t pay—could we say more? Set of Teeth From $5.00 UP Gold Crown and Bridge Work From $1.00 UP 1422 Second Avenue We Stand the Test of Time | 22 Years in One Location 8 Oats the Quickest Breakfast now has 2 styles of Quaker | QUAKER and regular the kind you've always 3 in half the time of coffee — d partly cooked — smaller flakes ok faster, that's the only difference. Freedom from constipation, mild or chronic, ean be surely looked for if you will eat Kellogg's Bran every day! ‘Two tablespoonfuls are puffi- cient; for severe casen with each meal, Ballons 's Bran is nature's most ‘wonderful food awaiting a chance to bring back your health, Kellogg's Bran is scientifiea!ly prepared to re- lieve puffering humanity from econsti- pation and it will do that. Boing cooked and krumbled, ‘g's Bran is delicious in ite 6 flavor, It should not be con- fused with common bran which is un- alatablo and hard to cat, Kellogg iran adds greatly to the pleasure o! eating other hot or cold cereals, A lar way to servo Kellogg's Bran to cook it with hot cereals, In wroparation, add two tablespoonfuls cosmetics and pastes and ts used to} a Umit extent tn pharmaceutical preparations. eve What Js the annual damage done by tree-killing insects in the Unit- ed States? It 4a epttmated at $100,000,000; the damage done to forest products fo eatimated at $46100,000, IN fA cl PHILLIPS ont SIST ON MILK OF WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1928, Eat Kellogg’s Bran regularly to get Cynthia Grey: permanent relief from constipation of Bran for each person, mixing 19 with the cereal to be cooked, Kellogg's Bran is especially do licious in raisin bread, muffins, pan- cakes, macaroons, ete. Rocipes appear on cach package, Realizo what Kellogg’s Bran is doing for constipation sufferers all over the nation, then just think what it can do for you and yours, Tha pores to come should guide you to eat bran regularly, to servo it in some form each day, You ean drive constipation out of your family with Kellogg's Bran— and remove tho cause of 00% of * human illness! First-¢lass hotels and clubs serve Kellogg's Bran in indi- vidual packages, Ask for tt gt your restaurant, All grocers, Advertisement How much {s spent on fuel bills and tire bills for automobiles year- ly? It {s estimated that the fuel dit is $1,00000,000 and the tire dit $450,00/00. eee How many French-born are there in the United States? According to the census of 1920 there were 162,490. “PHILLIPS” MAGNESIA Protect Your Doctor and Yourself - Get the Genuine! Beware of imitations of genuine “Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia,” the original Milk of Magnesia preserib- ed by physicians for fifty years. Pipp inf Accept only the genuine “Phillips.” 25-cent bottles, also larger size, contain directions and uses—any drug store. O More wood top No—nor any more ack/" coal or ashes for any- one to lug! The convenience and efficiency of Pearl Oil-made heat means comfort for everyone—fire-tending roomful at the touch for none, Heat by the of a match! Simply turn the wick high for initial warmth—then low to maintain it. And remember, Pearl Oil burns clean—it leaves absolutely no odor, For best results your heater needs more than just kerosene. “Kerosene” or “coal oil” may mean any kind of kerosene — ‘Pearl Oil” but one. It is the highest-quality kero- sene only, the result and study, and refined of years of research for heating and light- ing purposes exclusively by the Standard Oil Company’s own special process. Your dealer knows Pearl Oil — ask for it by name. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) PEARL CKER) OIL ir HEAT @ LIGHT