The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 6, 1924, Page 6

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CTOBER 6, 1 AG The Seattle Star So That You May Know Who Are the Demagogues! BY THE EDITOR , + platf OHN E. EDGERTON, president of the National Asso the hands of that eminent tribunal.” A dangerous fello | iget I i J Follette’s 5 ] ciation of Manufacturers, worked himself into a fine was Abe Lincoln vhich rou - e ¢ € frenzy in Chicago. He was addressing the convention ote ie Edge ie . and He ( s ij of the American Bankers’ association. P SHARE Edgerton's alarm, So inaidiously have.the | *ccused of cz ee eo Rest Spots He called Le ne Mg Ma demogogue “pe “the | radicals” been boring from within that two of them ; Badica) wp ¢ garde PS ld ae a ies ees country’s worst liability, is language was rather vio mt ceenatte atttina KS sida ‘nasigh ‘this mninetel rial by j ig i S L JOHNSON, of 155 21st ave., sends in a Suge tion lent, But the bankers applauded with genuine enthusi- : . schially sits i oo th Peed ipod pal Bae, cailand fa . that The Star deems worthy of passing along. ann, : se oi ! TIL, of Eneiand with d / Johnson: , Edgerton regards La Follette as radical and dangerous Justice Brandeis calls himself a liberal, but ; if ct ili find it in the Declarat i tray range Mime niga ee || because he would amend the constitution to curtail the | you would find a red card on him if you searched hi our 0 en there trike, a ae : - oe: : , 34 Justice Holmes is more Hypocritically, he has posed y hen is @ strike Would this at " t 0 power of the supreme court of the United States so that : i ily Pal ey: er an injunction against the yes ph Th enefit to tired shoppers and to a y. |] it cannot undo and nullify the work of congres as a conservative. He is, admittedly, & great jurist an pac N a ae lyr aif Ac aay tr ig He public should be entitled to its uncle a6 his be dangerous demagoguery, then would I point | Schola Ce aa tha “lake! of tidal by fier! eereee ie © <a le ee a polar ly finge r oe aoe 4 “arch dema ae And Justices Holmes and Brandeis have in all the they stg deni : 2 diag i , rial | fe, eee atin ah el eae ae Gow His name was Abrab Lincel years they have sat on the supreme bench been warn A But you an¢ ow that the court does not puni The way t . w, citize ance ait is name as? raham Lin n, , ‘ : them for re ugh tuff on the pic ket line, but oo, Baywhere in the great dov 1 of Yesler way, ¢ In his first inaugural address Lincoln said: “If this | ing their associates that they were usurping powers Pale Des meighbor, Tu . m foe ittaation of these street policy of the government upon vital questions affecting which the constitution never intended them to have. apt of cour ae pe , fe , + atts DOE: ‘ges vd pons 2 rest spots the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions They have preached unceasingly to their associates : : Johnson is rig ight, pee ine. 47 seers, OS th ae ha ited of the supreme court, the instant they are made in ordl- that the court's function is a judicial, not a legislativ AM writing this so you may t e in the ‘ Een yONe CusStICn, FOE WORES, MOR Ai nary litigation between parties in personal actions, the functic nd that it is no part of the cour busine to know an arch-demagogue when you see one. I ecppers. Ss Id like pe the c 1 provide them. people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to legislate by forced interpretations of the plain mean- have named five — Lincoln, Jefferson, Justices Holmes And The Star would Ii ahadianodh: ap yenrer to that extent practically resigned their government into ing of the constitution and Brandeis and La Follette. » Poor Fish! | ———— Develop Your Personality | H t K H bb F it ORPORATIONS which harness our western rivers and af we Talal TONT ROG ) A well us electric light ‘aio power like to build high dams. SELF ( ONS( IOUSN ESS OW 0 ) eep u A l ° High dams mean high power. BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON BY EVANGELINE WEED PR: Director of Personality Institute, ICA GELF-CONBCIOUSNESS a1w ays 3 ‘ ref effected thru But, unfortunately, the salmon refuse to A ‘ FOVAN 22 sntecoraiin imseemion. es nd fish ladders more than 30 feet high, evidently regarding high wa owenine the 11 oud nant Me dams as “agin natur,” fish being notoriously timid and talkative sex, t fo not enefictal to all citizer stupid. The power companies would like to build dams | 90 feet high. z | Prof. John N. Cobb, of the University of Washington, : , rvice Ine. acts entirel . s conceived the idea that salmon could be lifted over 90-foot NEA Se a — Per"! things can be ed ¢ K ; dams in elevators. So he built such an elevator at the # out Lig a rap * Sah ta ted da etal ¢| Discover the of your self - he White Salmon river dam in Washington, The contraption errr at | one’s ¢ ter, naciousneas and then set about 1 P failed. t nth to] 5 1 self Joursneas simply | correct st t Capt. A. E. Burkduff, Oregon st game warden, wit- and | hold . int bondag ; Pr Bi. lag ob ist. f ies : nessed the failure, and summed up the reason for it by ras | arnot ‘e rach ok pte yams te s om all saying: ish ladders present a biological problem, not an engineering problem.” Once he identifies it he can a isnesa,| ample material in the Wbrary t In his high-brow and up-stage way the warden said a | 1 \treahdowns, dlevourage rrect to strengthen his « witticisms, or their spirited mouthful. n business, and other serious| acter to acqui! per-| bands a and comebacks at the other fellow 5 ities: nality sweethearts, laints of the lack of You and I may give full approval to the plans and speci- fications of a fish elevator. Engineeringly, it’s perfect. Mechanically, it will work. You and I like it. But the fish don't. Being timid and stupid and reactionary, they sheer off, exclaiming, “What is this new thing? It isn’t a falls, nilets assert that people suf Thus, this sertes Is, In a way, an other, and he who be nelt-c ard cock was ¢ which t ar have neighbor parties where Hex | Never have men engaged in nusbands could comp | an enterprise more worthy of their pe jar da And this scheme might be fousneas im-| index of the reader, a means of self the ba ven inferior to others| analysis, The reader will b te what part of it and it isn’t a rapids, and it isn’t even a ladder. | a a | oma cach etticaat mit. Geld matieeal es And they refuse flatly to have anything to do with the | %0W Ge oN b Aidey THB STORY || ALL SKINS SAVED | ee expecially during campaign New-fangled and obviously dangerous invention, And they | 4. {titer irom Colonel Tecuevelt | aw ckine and ekelstomm of thw ele in every years don’t get up-stream to spawn. I was handed a tele hen loticate that bad teem killed wore on ; aa . ee 1 been sent from Mweru,| ried into Natvash | FABLES ON HEALTH s; but, an the ” pber «ST TENRY,” says Mrs. Salmo Salar, “what is it? 5 ‘ ‘t IN] z “Mother,” says Henry, “I don’t know, but it is Boma Tradin ¢ w neces " "i . DON Ab LIE DOW N ON HEALTH evidently something designed by the bolsheviks for our Mire Ce gene me reaching camp until Inte In the after: | $$, ; —_—_—__ se destruction. My grandfather told father and father told | gena + ry following wath1— The buse ekulle slaviiaeia ti ‘ Smoking’ Room A= R nth or so of 7; hysical trim over a period of me all about ladders. Grandfather was terribly afraid of [wnich you can publi Qu e . Questions Stori ont then climax it with a ladder at first. He said it was revolutionary. Later ¢ t : é orles he got so he liked 'em. For myself, I like ladders. They 4 Ke 4 re in Answered * : are much easier to go up than rapids or falls. But I don’t the “Am 4° mankiod are:your debtors, : ee YO om tion turn feel fine. Old ex to work with renewed grow careless. They ting habits will come ou from my heart. All what you like “bay window’ lost thru ex like this thing. A ladder was good enough for my father, | You have performed one of the great: | the heay ht Q. In what year was Colleen AD thee \ ree een @ i oopettioring creeping | eee Tee ip ind Bene whlecee and it’s good enough for me.” yt a — ees It." | the Aberdare range. 3 Moore bern? smoker, as he stretched himself out Se ate rou. aeh, be tong, betore prepa gS oot Beets pe So Mr. and Mrs. Salmon mill around at the foot of the | message for tranamiaion to Captain | wore im Read’ gutintha| rises plpiesiraiorsier scorer smd [ ee bn dam, and 4,000 babies die a-borning. Peary, Colonel Roosevelt started off| camp ar Then Heller took| @Q What are the fastest growing|"'! bis pipe, “Dut they have always! sfen and women alike will keep in| The moral ts simple: Don't lie eee on hia hunt out of Mweru for the|charge and supervieed the loading | shade trees? got a ready answer, even when they | | Sees cnet at ar ae ts ie . : 7 Guaso Nyero, Kermit had already | of them into two frieght vans, which| 4, Poplars, willows and aspens.|are Up against It. An old offender |“ ===" more than you would lie down om T WOULD be nice if the fish would permit us to hoist | one off with Tarlton to Lake Bar-| were to be attached to Colonel Roose bf e.76 phere " | + || the Job! brought up in front of the local || Sez Dumbe ad: | them over high dams in elevators. Then we could get Ingo, Their extraordinary luck in|velt's special train early next morn-| @. On what dad did June 21, 1000 | dlopenwetine: suintio’,' whe enldjayas| iF Tekias Haiasl| 7 sobs ‘ si hunting still held good. ing for transfer to Nairobl. Se 4 . | stall Plenty of electric power, and the fishing industry would |% * si_y| “After Ginner Roceevelt talked more | “r" rnaresey pathetically | about filling one’s || A f| hought not suffer. But, as Captain Burgduff says, the problem is MORE GOOD FORTUNE | (ot his recent trip. He seemed partic pies | at brought you here again?’ | mind with pieas- ad of his experiences when | ing alone with only his native wers in the Guaso Nyero coun biological. , PM : he ularly pi A fish is a poor reactionary, and a reactionary is a poor | About the 16th of October, I re-|! fish. Jcelved news of thelr good fortun ant thoughts is|| lost on some per- This people draweth nigh unto me sons. Here’s one || With their mouth, and honoreth me fellow who 4s try- || With their lips; but their heart is far Two police officers, str.’ Drunk, I suppose?’ queried the Q. What was the sub-committes| of the Dawes committee, headed by Reginald McKenna, appointed to in 1 Ralewtais froin Colonel. her r catiaata? Yes,’ replied Pat, without re- | = | bimseit He | q wired shatter |i MORE TROPHIES a een The committee of which former laxing at both ay them.’ ” | nd be i see gare oecehieenecar var . ert on the preceding day d 3 v ~ | | Chancellor of the Britiah Exchequer, = a ae ee onpaems | RISyY oy mae More, Mr. Coolid ge le i beedhea 5 %| Reginald McKenna was chairman aes “rndger’ Deni . As esaal aha sat eed sa J idan irelncesceg, BS AMING no names, Nominee Coolidge also condemns | pees ao ag drags np deer ed nom ati ny aa a gt os — that California supreme court's decision barring La mikey natives Here kal" ss ae tata Follette from the ballot. “I recognize,” he tells the La | Just arrived at Nyeri fror 1 specimen] @Q How many cuble inches does Follette folks in Louisiana, “that it is the privilege of our |‘Ne Gus#e N All well exoept | of 's a Jong and! the quid pint contain jon porter who was’ tossed by rhinc he had killed) 4. 98.875 cuble inches. voters to support anyone they wish at the polls and feel ashe baraiont atork. oti pedo that the laws should not be drawn for the purpose of pre- nree more elephants, completing the Washington and getting a good bull! his trophies. He said that this little This is really a fine beginning, if Calvin intends to start [tor American museum at New York A. He voted for the aubmiesion of ve = a : 4 : Py pee Me se America at personally conducted hunt was de-| 445° oronibition amendment to the t Th Saying things. But his particular opinion on the California | Auwo killed rhino with excellent horn, | lightful, and he had become really Luiicnbat wus cose aousiie tha 1S e es in case in particular would be enjoyable. California’s law not [* fale, and giraffes, eland and attached to his native employes. Volstead act, aa, in his opinion, W. ls— on hee zebra of the northern species as well at night Roosevelt and Heller) soory drain only has intent to prevent disfranchisement, but directs [7) Steriches, oryx, porunuk und other at the hotel, while Cunning atlas a rhino with a very long horn, in| arrived at Nairobi at noon, and found | ¥POR It? A Slap at Ego Bis cea et metsioe : us fag aro fe TO BOYS AND GIRLS the earth. |With the help of the natives: they | pe sewcners =: Ole Uae ae off to} suarter dollars coined in 1916? \good horns, greater Kudu and m and he ts tting better. Have k the courts to “liberally construe,” and three of the justices |animais which we had not hitherto|! addition to the bag you already|Lord Delamere and a great many| 4: Your invention muat de passed | HE public used to sneer and guffaw when imaginative [these specimens for the He stood chatting with Lord Dela-| interstate Commerce Commiasor ee [eh the hep tthe natives they This Handsome Man’s egotism, knowing no bounds, fancied that the stars | | McMillan’s house, whe » was to| hame and myself bedded down In the know nd settlers on the platform |% by the interstate commerce com- scientists, far in advance of their time, suggested that | {"" another monumental evidence of | mere for somo time, arranging the | Wasnington, D.C. ° . ¢ : : a“ most stupendous task under mos A. Both the old and new; 8328,-| and their satellites far off in space existed only as tiny lati keen co is pion J on See oe ee | 800 of the old type and 52,000 of the points of light for men to glance at when they felt like it. | Atric had ever teen tetter served| , Kermit and Tarlton arrived the| neyo type | f is, i { ny the staff that accomplished it morning, having ridden Cer Now we know that our world is, in the universe, les id ho ausrg eoteevait She pane d fron Nakuru in a freight trals Q. When’ did the re time i than a single drop of water in the oceans, With knowledge, | hy his personnel during those long| They had done te successful | iibition act go into effect? man becomes more humble. j hunting during the two or three days —running for election on the tickets of both the old par- |collected, the skin all being pre:|camp. We were all up and about at| 1 have m safety device which T onevelt. nel Roosevelt on hin re-| ™ission before it can be accepted by Heller's and Cunninghame'’s master details of his hunt with him after| ee | HORE an merce a doetinea nt Bek | A. The war-time prohibition pro 4 remained at Nakuru. " i 1 u 2 old P hag Saban ede onl | want to get adopted by rallronds; ties—“liberally construed” the independent opposition into alas ty rs pemesa ee \o por besetiae eo cebane ote aug to oes tho poss aie have to pass the discard. What do you think of that, Mr. Coolidge? slr mandated gorecape algettad Duras tal eae mend Posh Agen ared hls of ich a long absence. a ratiroad company. Submit your people may live on Mars and other heavenly bodies besides |ly work with thelr skinning knives.|jurvs ond ie chie ae Wlere te neo mM pig . | Q. Were the old or new style | Meanwhile Kermit had killed his j they vision was signed by the president |second elephant, another rhino with | ——-% | November £1, 1918, and went into Read how to obtain this great Skooter without spending a single . . y| cE . TIRELESS effect Jw 919, | New Discoveries foe Reet cgloc rtcastreeat aie (yb ee eee eee x A : All the members of the expedition} A. The U. 8, Bureau of Btandawts EATHER experts are on the threshold of new dis- Colonel Roosevelt, Heller and Cun 1 san. wistfully of Kermit’s ii tound.| reports that temperatures of 10,000 penny: coveries in the domain of forecasting, predicts Mar- | #!shame returned to Nyeri on Oct.| {ii tenty of endurance on safari, It|t0 11,000 degrees Fahrenheit have | vin. He's head weatherman for Uncle Sam 15; and they prepared the many) soomed that he could even wear | been obtained in the electric furnace. | Simply secure seven new subscriptions to The Seattle - trophies there for conveyance by na-| fawn euch tri A veered 4a Con: etre | Star, A new subscription is an order for The Star for The main obstacle is that weather involves so much of | tive porters to Naivasha, where they|iinehame and Tarlton. ‘The latter| @. What Is the length of Ifo of three months from a person who 1s not now having the the unexpected and that’s something no one can antici- |°"® ore et on |was looking very much the worse| swans, squirrels, buffalo? | paper aaliveres to their home. When avs Baars secured 5 1 ; A lo tile Soachel Sstentlnik’ kes ROU et ‘A. Bwana live 200 years, squirrels} your first subscription we will set aside a Skooter for pate. The human animal has to rely largely on precedent. | trom Londaini to the Unsin Gishu |" his hard hunting in compeny| 4. | Pascal Buffalo: row. Ie 10°88 you In your name, and when you havo secured the seven Ro , ROOSEVELT looked re hobrdinie. to Tarlton, «26 ab- | year subscriptions, and they have been verified, you will be | According to Tarlton, Kermit ab-| years. . and In X-/solutely did not know the meaning| oe | presented with your Skooter. ¥ ae eat , his ae pee jof the word “fear,"* and no hardship | p——_§CTENCR Call on your friends and neighbors who are not now JON l orecauweascartes able sis") was too great for him, Distance | taking The Star, Secure their subscriptions. But get of wear and tear. It was a mass of| W145 no obst and he would as MISSING LINK started right away and be the first in your neighborhood = 7 patches. As we turned back with | | STRONG - i DAILY him and rode toward the Rift Vai. | 200" travel 40 miles a day ns 20. His —~ to win this handsome reward. ‘ 2 STURDY and rode toward ‘al | root ing had tly impressed 10 = ipti sw pet POEM el, ho told mo am little about | 20% cunnine teed everyone in tt | AS soon as Darwin gave to the] All Subscriptions Must Be New —That Is, SWIFT AS GREASED : nt adventures. ., expedition; and on more than ono| world his theory that man and) People Who Are Not Now Having The Airtel ast - <8 oceasion Kermit had run down on|Monkey descended from the same the Rage! NARROW ESCAPE | foot fleet-footed antelope or gazelle, {@ncextors, scientists. conducted a | Star Delivered to Them —- —— | ‘ rch for for t er evidences | y IHE common shout of nowadays in always Safety First. You'll hear the|” micermu j oe and then killed them after a long a for fi in SEO -OLUAPLS TIC Aen (Use these subscription blanks for the first subscriptions. Additional blanks can be had at ery no matter where you go. It's just a short expression that has duly come ena Tare both very Proud /chase across the sun-burned plain Sr ine ieee iets The Star Circulation Department.) of the fact that we have gotten some of our elephants without the help of Cunninghame or Tarlton," he said, nd his eyes were full of pride. phant hunting is no child's play Gn Sieaday Go ae we ali ledt | popiactess by the term ‘missing Nairobi for Londiant. | ‘Thtre never has been found an ex- We reached Nakruru at 3 oclock in jact missing link in the senso tha the morning, and here collected our| this term generally is used—that 1s, ime. I had a mighty narrow| porters and horses, Cunninghame, |half-man and half-ape. There have » from an old bull, too.” riton and I worked all thru the | been, however, a number of remains | ell me about it, Colonel; I’ve|small hours of the morning to see|found that scientifically are real only heard rumors," I begged him. | that they were all got onto tho train. | missing links in the —evolutlor ured right down to the letter. It seems ‘tcould be much stronger and| “Cunninghame and I came across | At daybreak wo reached Molo, on the | scale. However, all these remains ‘teould make a bigger hit, Don't-you think that Safety ALWAYS would|a big tusker and I fired a little to|summit of the Mau Escarpment, and | showed more sinfian than human be better? ono side of its eye,” Roosevelt com.|at an altitude of 8,300 feet above | characteristics, (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) menced. ‘’The shock stunned the|the sea level. This is the highest] ‘The last one, discovered recently, big fellow, but did not kill him. My| point on the Uganda railway. Thelis a fossil of the Miocene period second bullet sped true, and the ele-| railway up to this point passes thru| showing parts of@a skull. Tt was phant crashed to the ground, Before| great forests an@ thru occasional |fougd in India by Dr, Barnum Brour, there was time for mo to reload, the| open glades, The alr was fresh arw|of the American Museum of thick bushes don my left and a| bracing, and had a cold snap to it.!ural History, New York city huge bull elephant charged straight | From the Mau summit wo ran down |remarkable part of these remains e a e j for ae Lh ty so clove that he] thra fine open grass plains, odged|is that the teeth bear a close re. | @ could have knocked me down with| with belts of fine forests, to Lon-|semblance to the teeth of man. : ‘i iis trunk. @ * dian} at an altitude of somo 7,410 | Indicates that it 19 the closest of all Seventh Ave., Between Union and University Sts. | #1 leaped to ono side afr doaged | tect submen to the primitive human fepliind a troe, throwng the empty (Continued in the Next Issue) race, been rehearsed, and it’s one that everybody ought to know. When little folks start off to school they'll hear their mother say: “Now watch your step when crossing o'er the street. Play safety ay to autos "cause they take the right of way, and It's up to you to be the one discreet. And then you'll find at crossings, where the raiiro: by, warning that you ought to understand. It's ‘where it’s sure to catch the eye. It tells you of the danger near at hand.| + The “Safety Firat’ idea is a good one, I'll admit, but it's weak when fig I hereby subscribe to The Seattle Star for three months, and thereafter until or- dered discontinued, for which I agree to pay the authorized carrier at the rate of 50c a month. I AM NOT NOW HAVING THE STAR DELIVERED TO MB I hereby subscribe to The Seattle Star for three months, and thereafter until or- dered discontinued, for which I agree to pay the authorized carrier at the rate of 50c a month. I AM NOT NOW HAVING THE STAR DELIVERED TO ME be.) SOME EISSEESSOESSOOOCIOOSOSOSSSIOOICS ADDRESS cesecsecsceseseeceeecenceseeee NAME. ..c.ccccccsecesseccvccccsccccstess AWDRESS GL. a ievciceesscseccars BRON | Si cds anbtaaasnaanies

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