The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 10, 1924, Page 6

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tHE i ATTLI TAR ; " | a —_ es = = = ___}|What Darrows’ Deten D. COCHR/ Trust Them Not, Oh Gentle Maiden! — se Means to Y ou Star Pudiione gaa [2 ‘ { oo ad ; ™ rare oa Trees Service, B LAST SUMMER | Any \ f x a bh oh, year thee Sie DIONT HAVE Ik : ay / ( : | A SINGLE BEAU- y x a “Well Done” ‘| auhe’ HE CITY Portland has retired Hugh Brad. ast | a f = " River a n, Some folks call Hug \\w rl , i— ° : Brady the m ver, but he was never a diver. Cit VIM gg PC NWI \ Ze a ‘ 4 ; for a pittan ull weathers, all devoted himself \\\M) NS Kaan || I TL ANY MITT WN Wi ee ee to the job of salvaging human wreckage from t ° ‘ ns , t nnd twisting depths of the old Willamette river. BUT NOW SHES THE e my i. Webs Beapsderorgpedy: Rp A Thought } If ever a man deserved high tribute i MOST POPULAR GIRL IN ‘ wit bie aad ‘ must pict pra! okay, Brady—tribute for his knowled, i { town \t Ds) 5 one oe : 4 she He caileth together his friends i failed, and I in his old lent Searchers h boat, would commune wi é ver, and withir the hour discover the body e dim rive nook by some chance dem ent. Brad knew his river as no other 1 knew it; a placid ming river, with another rushing, twisting, sucking iver running beneath A lifetime spent battling a river for dead bodies Of solitude, snow wind and n and ever grappling; feeling thru old fi nights cross currents gers the deep 58 ARN A A A SLO TAN ACCC | hidden, raveno Ise of a great city river; not diving and clawing from abov an uncanns Sense locati grisly tre € A | e of that vith scant pay and a daily ne ast Miscovery, and mental con highest sort + One of the binders up of the broke rted was Brady | Monsidering everything, probably his pension is not undul » Pxorbitant; $70 a month for his remaining years! This Crime Thing WEHE Loeb-Leopold hearing will cost Chicago $600,000 § That sum is less a regular trial would have cost, ut it is illuminativ it informs the public, not only there but everywhere, that crime is enormously expensive fin dollars and cents, to say nothing of its hideousness i, Chicago now has attained a record of a murder a day. ot all of these crimes will entail such expenses as are ittached to the Loeb-Leopold hearing, but no one of them 3 fail to take its money toll from the pockets of the ‘taxpayers. i And what is true in Chicago is also true in every other community where crimes, great or small, are committed. | Every time an offense against the law is perpetrated, hether it be of minor or major degree, it reaches into the Mpocket Of every citizen and takes therefrom, in cold cash, Rither so many cents or so n y dollars ve lemand. Soak your hide with that fact. = We deprecate it but do not measure crime for what it ‘is. We look upon it as merely an infringement or assault of One or more persons upon others, individually or col- i tively and in one way or another—as a shock to the fiuman sensibilities. It is all of that and far more. It is a money tax of burdensome size. It is something it we permit to be forced on us and for which we must ‘and do pay in cold, hard cash. It is something that im- overishes us not only morally, physically and mentally, ‘out financially. ) The remedy is in the hands of civilization everywhere. at crime’s repulsive face leers at us from every angle our fault and ours alone. And we pay a heavy price ‘or that leer. e case may Remember: “8582” ADEOPLE killed at railroad grade crossings in 1923 totaled 8,582. This is Uncle Sam’s official figure. ‘Killed one by one, they attracted no great furore. If a Single accident killed 8,582 the country would be alarmed ito action. The logical action, of course, is elimination of dangerous de crossings as rapidly as possible. Meantime, motor- and drivers should play safe—exercise even more lution than seems necessary. Chalk ‘8582” on your windshield. i His Bark Immured OV. GIFF PINCHOT, of Pennsylvania, has sent his By dog, “Pep,” to prison for life and it is a doggone is e. In the first place, a governor has no judicial 2 ers and cannot legally sentence bird, beast or man, to E m. In the next place, “Pep” did not have a fair trial | before a jury of his peers, as the law requires. But “Pep” is in jail despite all this. It is true that “Pep” killed the house cat with whom re had amicably associated for many moons and, perhaps, mais act was wanton and without justification, but he was ‘entitled to offer a little something in the way of mitiga- ' tion, as is the modern process. He should have" had his ‘day in court and alienists testify for him, since it was not ‘improbable that his unexpected violence was due to puppy ‘phantasies—perhaps his endocrine glands had slipped an peecentric or something. Mayhap he has a sandwich brain )whose upper layer is applesauce and the lower one plain ‘buckwheat batter. Who knows? Moreover, it might be ‘shown that, while he knew right from wrong—if there be any wrong in killing a cat—and was fully aware of his Tesponsibility, he was still powerless to resist handing a fatal biff to the family feline. You never can tell about these things until a court allows the alienists to horn in with their stuff. “Pep,” however, was not only denied all “these safeguards of the law, but he was deprived of all his legal rights. The whole thing is rotten. like a dog. They have treated “F Cami TOW comes an odor, a wonderful odor, that tickles It floats o'er the breezes and, oh, how it pleases @raw in each breath © The cali’s from the kitchen; your a Wetored on the shelf. The neighborhoo Make you desire it yourself. The fresh touch of peaches and plums fairly sc 900, fills the air. There's essence of cherries and all sorts of berries. ape blending is there. your palate to dea What pleasure ite's itehin know what smells it and coc compels it “degree. Just think wyat it's doing; tufts for you and fof me ‘of hard labor employed. (Copyright, 19 , for The Star) th “if KEEP WASHBOWLS CLEAN | What | need A worthy old metal—that big boiling kettle that heats to the proper { GiRUE,—~ You | BY HERBERT QUICK i 4 tw takes t a spelled ¢ Dawes’ ¢ e t eput ‘ tr « e k ' A a 20 or 20 years age and f « ot : t was use ar . t ¢ ® for a stronger term.” Hell and y s her kn not—to the fact this king | P) Questions ¢ Answered * | Q What ts the welg piece and a 1-cent A. Fivescent piece, 77.16 grains ent plece, $8 grains | You can ge | question o tion by writing Th Editor, 1833 New York ave, Washington, D. C., and enclosing two cents In loose stamps f ladvice. | dential. | | signed. * ! —_——_—————4 | o 8 | an marks and Ger likely to go up in price? jerman marks} r thelr pre-war value The future value of German marks and German bonds is purely) At present the return speculative. of the mark | acema moat unlikely | stabilized to the rentenmark, They are now at the rate of one trillion thich in Every ef- keep the re is worth 23.8 cents. is being made tw kat par, Aa the stability has been dependent ly upon h ngical facto Dawes pi 2 to eatablia | new German Rank of Jasuc | bring about a further stabilization man marks wil at the gold mark | | As to German bonds, persona buy-| ling them for investment purposes! rate of are entering a risky speculation, as ¢ actual value of the bond has, not changed, deapite the recent ad. \vancea in price on account of speculative buy The bonds are mark currency and not in | @ What is proper food to feed to} pet frogs; will they eat’ cock apt | A. Frogs will onty cat live food,| | auch as insects, small fish and other | |amalt aquatic animals Jail serve nicely for })- —— to ite original value q| the farmer, is in the market and bis daughter Mary had nu merous squabbles. “Hell and Tommy,” he th might be “Hel Marta” rm of unted to pression nve Tomm M san T He i ta a har ex e 4 fo Helena eA rm. The have nm What Folks Are Saying LIAM LITTLE, ‘Tho first ch Hest temperanc he abuse of strong drink English: act, in spired ich he saw about him in Baby FRED VOILAND, ex-president Axsociation of feta Top Kan: “It seem: hat the greatest broadside for fact od of this c America js the ntry’s best patron amalr No More Will You! Freeze Your Toes! WASHING TO fa much-too-short Sept. 10.—No our toes poke st ma of commer: © government expert watt nel inuitl Wee t ME 1 nan that of a ile the longest Research Laboratory | RS. MANN was an Immaculate ) housekeeper, so there was ain to admonish her regarding | Ora nee of washbowls. | But many people are careless and| what pleasure it's breawing from fruit) here les a fertile field for germ pas |sage and infection, Careful washing | % And also remember, this coming December, when canned things are{of bathtubs and bowls should not be | and a little gasoline on a woolen Being enjoyed—the person who cooked ‘em, and ne'er overlooked ‘em, a tat | neglected. A little borax will keep a porcelain | jcloth can be used in removing dirt of ‘the Union Oil Company of California ¢ from stain while bath: ing the tub shbowl wring a cloth in fine and rub this, sprinkling with b Flannel dipped in a good rub for cleansing the enamel and discolor: tio and when cleans The building pictured above, which is located at our Wilmington Refinery, is designed for research work in order to insure the outstanding quality of Union Oil Company products. soap over and at the sam@ time polish leaving a Locomobile Owners Endorse Union Non-Detonating Gasoline Fine-Car Fuel ~ for Cars of all Grades U nion DETONATING my sheep which was 15:6 ——— SCIENCE | Interest in whet | ez don’t to go in hark / eg ~} g 3 = ~ a} — : i] [~} — Mars } EEE ~ , Smoking Room , re r Stories r rea 2 eres ‘ tad £ an event Ney : ‘ ‘ . ab | you had the scientific knowledge, the skill, the experience and the facilities nécessary to make the best gasoline, and made your own fuel to order for yourself, you would probably produce a gasoline like Union. ° Union is a gasoline that yields complete sat- isfaction because we have all of the above at- tributes. In addition we have a valuable reputation at stake. « ’ Union Gasoline has the quality of non-deto- nation which means the elimination of “knock- ing” on hills, and in slow, heavy pulls, quicker acceleration, and a smoother, more vibration- less speed. Full confidence in the motor you drive is a Satisfaction. Why not have the same confidence in the fuel you use in it? Gasoline NON-

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