The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 23, 1925, Page 8

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sf ond einen Rea The Seattle Star oan, Nigotl & Ruthmas, Special My Prees Bervion . bet M mery 9 cage office, York offices, 18 West 44th #¢) Boston By math out of etty, te per month. year $4.00. By carrier, city, ie @ month Difference in the Pride How RIMA DONNA JERITZA is suing a Vienna publisher who gives to the rid her career from chambermaid to tropolitan opera, and is thus exhibiting i rence between the pride of man her view and deed? When the un a pin into the self-made man who has risen from office boy to bank presi dency, or from bootblack to railroad presidency, 2 he'll ooze pride in which he g¢ Jeritza rages over the idea that the crowds who worship at the shrine of her talent will remember that once she made up beds, shook the rugs nnd swept the dirt into the corners, a common chambermaid. And yet, an hon- est chambermaid is one of the noblest works of God. All Set for the Fray ATCH your step, enemies! ' No matter if our warship guns are not elevated; no matter if we are not equipped with bombing planes} no mat- ter if we are short of subma no matter if we have but a small army and meager supplies of war—still, we are ready. Gaily caparisoned, gold-b ided from heel to highest hair, booted and spurred and full panoplied—we are read) The new governor of Missouri—the state that shows and must be shown has just appointed 29 colonels on his of- ficial staff, and the canines of carnage had better take notice. ies. hell, dance hal) whe men, where th prohibited rines ; does not The Father grades S thousands of fathers of daughters thruout the land have been watching to see the final attitude of Ellingson, father of the 16-year-old matri- cide, whose shooting of her mother is be- ing discussed everywhere. The father has now come to the aid of his child. How many of the fathers interested in this case would have hesitated so long? How many are thinking thoughts like these: She is my child. She is of my blood. | How much of my early weakness and | recklessness may she not have inherited? A new talking morals, aoe ; 2? 2? Answers to Your Questions 4 Q What was the first American Fity to establish the commission form of government? ‘A. Galveston, Texas. ‘ eee ! Q What does “Tippecanoe Tyler, too" mean? | + A. This was a rallying cry for the igs in the campaign of 184 The phrase was the first line of the) Chorus of a popular song. “Tippe-| cance” was a popular.name for + 1y° can get an answer to | any question of fact or in- formation by writing The Seat- tle Star Question itor, New York ave, Washington | | D. C. and tnelosing 2 cents tn | loose stamps for reply. No | medical, legal or marital ud- | | vice. Personal replies, confi. | dential. All. letters must be | || signed. 1} anc much of my as awful as hers had I succeeded in them? How much of the latent evil that I was in me descended to my child, to warp She is my child world when seorn and shame are t her, when her misery is exploited and she moans and cringes in the presence of a frightful act of rage- by her, with every dollar and word of comfort and hope that I command! “All hope abandon ye who enter here” may speak from the entrance of a Dante's It was not written there by a be- neficent and just God. heart of a humane and just father. stand by and hope for my erring, for- saken child, come what may. It was not she, but the and would punish her who permitted the liquor, sions of mere children My child is in the abyss, with all the world against her. pit there is always a gleam of hope I will show her that, with the God who forgives even when the world Emporia has been caught stealing cc At Elkhart, a siate game warden, en- gaged in a feud, shot a man and got him- self all fatally shot up. Why is William Allen, the white hope of the suffering s effete East, eating pie and oysters and lone foot 1322 | | i¢ would take him 8% hours to travel \_——— science eeemtatives Gan Francie e Michigan Awe, Ni sins would have been know burst into accomplished of me turns t her, upon again aviest then will I stand It is not in the I will y who now abhor young girls met strange sensuous jazz, aided by aroused all the pas In the deepest, vilest aid of the Call for a White Hope HE recently-retired governor of Kan- sas faces the charge at law of hay- ing trafficked in prison paroles. The son of the governor is likewise ac- cused and it is alleged he was “caught with the goods.” Car! J. Peterson, bank examiner of the state, is alleged to be the last and most convincing word in this sale of paroles. elected justice of the peace at al, te; loafing around the while all this is the mat- ter with Kansas? 2? | Q. How long would it take « snail { }to travel a mile? | | A. The utmost aped of a snail is @ minute, and at that rate . if he kept up @ continuous TURKEY Gen. Harrison, the whig nominer, a Sestowed upon pim because of M8) to completely dissolve the ruat Battie with the Indians on the Tre metal parts should then be Tippecanoe river, and Tyler 44! singed thoroly with water. If am- Yhe nominee for the vice presidenoY:| monium citrate ia not available, bf wiEeee | may be made by newtralizing citric + Q Who wrote: lacid with strong ammonia water. “No, the heart that has truly lov'd eee ‘i never forgets, | Q Where can one get a copy of ‘ But as truly loves on to the close: | the national bankruptcy act? ‘As the sunflower turns on her god) 4. From the superintendent of ’ when he sets | documents, Government Printing of- ‘The same look that sho turned| fice, Washington, D. C., for £5 cente. 3 when he rose" Remittance must de made by money members of com- from New York to} § days, 21 hours and eee —_—_—®) ROBERT E. LEE A reader of this column asks for the story of the life of Gen. Robert E. Lee, who was born January 19, Any other reader interested may obtain a ! g. Thomas Moore, in “Believe Me) order. Sie there of the house ‘metals? A. Four; Lady Astor, the duchess staining some free ammonia will re- F454 4 A. If you refer to human Ife, the : claimed the most victims—a grand ada own Lake Erie? THOMAS JEFFERSON, actor:| signed in 1783, the boundary be-| fushamed to take his own chitdren. o20 z6 | there in the United States? theater as against the radio les in) po) ag. ‘sane level. Second, by playing to} @ What vessel holds the trans- show runs long enough. The radio | tember went F. GUY DAVIS, advertising ex-| is to make the best une of news- bak ghnae each day, with changing conditions | dustrial dramas of the TYRUS COBB, baseballist: “There | | tour-page mimeographed bulle- | | vice ard training you give him than} | pureau, enclosing a 2-cent 4f All Those Endearing Young rer Charms.” | Q How many women . {are Q. How can rust be removed from) mons? 1A. A 10 per cent to 15 per cent) of Atholl, Mrs. Hilton Philipson and Loiution of ammonium citrate con-| yiss E, Wilkinson. ‘move iron rust without seriously tnt Q What was the most destructive ‘tacking the base metal, The solution) war of history? ‘should be heated and left in contact sith the metal for £4 to 48 hoMrs) worig war, beginning im 1914, totgs of 9,998,771. What Folks vas A S in Q. Does the Unted States or Can- re ayt g A. According to a treaty between! ~~“ the United States and Great Britain, beMy father promised never to ap: | tween Canada and the United States) gear in a play to which he was|runs thru the middle of Lake Erie.| ‘I have kept the same vow.” Q How many persons of Irish| se and how many of German birth are * HU BRN Re rpial LL pin fae Cer eap rhe A. According to the 1920 census, pes.. Newe: ° | Iriah Birth, 1,087,234; German birth, two directions. First, the price of | tit admission must be reduced to a} capacity audiences at $2 a seat the atlantic speed record? producers can make money if a} wilt fill their houses to capacity.” | Plymouth in ee, 6 | 57 minutes. pert: ‘The advertising man must) 74> have a picture of his medium If he |" pungter's. papers. He must realize that a new! world is presented in newspapers | described in every edition. The} newspaper is one of the greatest in-| virwiee | is more satisfaction, I find, in see-| | tin containing this information ing a recruit develop under the ad-!| by writing to our Washington pe eeceseranios something your-| | stamp for reply. welt.’ | | I + Nappi time <> 1H graphophone stilled and the whole house is quiet. A pin drop could! ¢ eas'ly be heard. A short time ago was the whole place a riot. | certain that something‘s occurred. ‘The door bell is stuffed so it simply can't ring. All callers are forced now to rap. What is it that} afi of this quiet can bring? Why, baby is taking a rap. ‘The wee little darling is tucked into bed, and it’ buried in slumberland deep. Of all sorts of nots motaer has a strong dread since she’s rockabyes baby to sleep. The e of a youngster, of course, is a strair but. you'll always find mother on top. She's surely entitled to rest: she can gain when the tiny tot’s taking a nap. | (Copyright, 1925, for The Star) between Bolshy tendencies Europe, following the war, teresting The matter now of most interest to them ix the apparent repudiation of| Mohammedanism by a large part of | Turkey. the lives and mental processes of un- | toid millions in Asia and Africa, but Turkey always has been the heart of this religion wondering whether this break with Islam means new freedom which among the | ples, tions to science are negligible. to lose its power in Turkey when many women joined a movement to discard the veil. This disregard for the teachings of the Koran was fol- lowed by repudiations of other time- honored customs. Telling It to the same need for a foreign market. By that time our population should have grown large enough to consume most of what we produce.—The Late Secretary of Agriculture Wallace, in | A. The Mauretania, which in Bep-| annual report for 1924, make | @ What is the latest discovered) Muscle Shoals) would be a sort of leap in the dark, and we should be giving away a valuable property un- der almost any terms that we could make or which are proposed to be made.—Senator Harreld (Rep.) Okln- homa. express was much surprised when the police refused to make . behind a woman's skirts, nowadays, is out of luck carrying carry the bubonic germ. the carry the tubercular germ. darned companionable thing left in It's} the house, sav |bug, and the: something, when they catch him. —Karek. xviii, OCIOLOGY Is one of the youngest sciences. It deals with rm | men, groups and ni viem in Rusala and other mass | of different peoples of} fered in material for sociologists. | Mohammedaniam holds sway over Sociologiats are death to Turkey or a) will place her| productive modern peo- At present Turkish contribu- The Mohammedan religion started Congress Excerpts From the Congressional Record) a SELF-SUSTAINING In 15 or 20 years we shall not have eee SIGHT UNSEEN any contract we should the government (for Almost for The Oregon man who stopped an train to ask for a match Nght of it. The man who attempts to hide | Now they accuse the cockroach of the cancer germ. Rats Files carry Cate and dogs Not one typhoid germ. the proletariat bed. 1 find him carrying The soul that sinneth, it shall die, BATH is cause it the gr eat evil, be- cuts off hope.—Haz- a litt. 4. | (Copyright, i ie Edison’s Views on Life and Death 1926, N, BA. Bervice, Ine) RANGE, N. J., J “What do you was tho next { Thomas A he had expounded on communication wi “I nee nothing « the individual any m & hive of bees or In a city is only an aggregate of cells or individuals, and the itself, aside from the agaregation and organization of units, has no existence. The human personality is not a thing apa oan gregate cells; and nnolution of the cells personality ceases.” of the question nay pon after his theories n the dead. that sort in anked ro than in each community Then immortality ts a myth? reason to believe y will nee no that the human person be immortal any more than one of my phonograph records will be immortal. But that Ix not saying that death ends all.” Aison's theory of life, he nays in his only thru his acceptance of much that has been developed by many other minds. For some years he has been in accord with the elementals of Darwin, Tyndal and Huxley, He has carefully fol lowed the investigations and con clustons of Prof, William James, Prof. William H. Hyslop, Prof. F. W. H. Meyers, Dr, Richard Hodgnon, Maurice . Mactert! and others, and sifted out of it all whatever appears to be truth fitted to his own thought. For this reason regarding these ideas as if they were strictly his own The prevailing theory that cells. grow anew every seven yoars is not accepted by Edison. He says he knows “the cell is not ro simple a thing as that, and does not totally pass away in seven yeqrs or necessarily !n 70.” There is, he believes, a central substance in the cell—a germ plasm—that never dinsipates or dies during the life of the body; It remains the constant receptacle of the psychic, or mental forces that actuate the brain and body. These ultra-microscopic — sub- stances constitute the real life- essence and, co-operating, form the eeat of the paychic activities, such as thought, memory, rea- son, will, heredity—personality. Here ts the center of man's indl- viduallty as well as of his life, and {t is physical—that {s, ma- terial. It {= this substance that perniats from day to day and year to year as personality, and is transmitted from generation to generation as heredity. “These lfe-easence particles— are immortal?” There are indications con- vincing to Edison that “the life of these particles does persist, for awhile at least, after death. One indication lies in heredity, The persistence of personality in heredity is one of the most clearly-marked facts of human life. The will, which Is the basis of personality and heredity, is a form of motion, and there is no motion except as it is exercised in some material substance. So, tho the will is material, it en- dures after death, but in this world, not in a ‘next.’ Asked if he had as yet pro- duced any mechanical device that has to any degree registered ac- tivities or consciousness of dis- embodied personalities, Edison only half-responded with a lateral shake of the head and an enig- matical smile, He talks freely, however, regarding devices that have been produced by others, and thus suggested the lines and SMOKING ROOM STORIES — 4 Meee smokers were talking about the ladies on the McCoy jury and deriding their knowledge of jury duty, ‘Never mind,” said the lawyer- smoker, “these ladies that now fre- quent the courts of justice are wiser than they used to be, and that Is saying something. Why, I remember the story that was told me by a fel- low-lawyer, A young woman was a witness In the case. She was so dumb that the exasperated court finally asked her if she had ever appeared }as a witness in a sult before, ‘es, sir,’ she answered promptly ‘What suit was it?” queried the court “My blue serge,’ convincingly. she answered, an | wtrumenta readily respond to liv- ing presences, but none of them | has as yet registered the pres | ence of the dead. Two Dutch scientists, Dra. Matia and Van Zeist, have, however, produced an instrument called the dyn- amistograph, which, they assert, they have induced a departed Personality to enter, have measured it and proved it to be subject to the laws of gravita tion. This Instrument ts now in on’s laboratory. aregoing | | methods of inquiry thi Prof. Sydney Alruts of Up- Sweden, has de te instrument, the r testing the will Paul Joire of Paris resting | meter, oF There trometer, or The ululo on sala university vised a del volometer pressure. Di nth the enerey measurer paychic reveal th energy, living All of these tr in suppe of any or disembodied Mr. Fixit and the Gum Pest | HE chewing gum pest—you all have met gim—comes in for a drubbing today at the hands of Mr. Fixit, The Star's trouble man. Have you sent in yet your diffi- culty? It must be of a public nature. Cat Mr. Pirit: Last night I attended partly covering the sidewalk. Hos a banquet at which there were two|been there since November, What or three after-dinner apeakera, Alcan be done about it? LB. man sitting by me was chewing a! The street department has been highly-acented chewing gum all) snowed under ever aince the big snow thru the specch-making, It # gotiand the thaw that followed. If you on my nerves that I could not listen| will phone EL tot-0732 and report |to the speakers, What can be done | this, Mr. Fixit will do the same, and with @ man like that? it should not be long before the rub- J.C. B. |bish ts removed. | No doubt the man did this thought: | a eace Or it may be he did not know.| Mr. Firit: What can Be done There in law gainst his of- about the automobile congestion on fense, but let us hope that he will | /7th ave, at E. Madlsonf? There are |read thin and forswear gum chewing |s0 many automobiles standing on lin public places: both sides of the atreet at night . | that it ds difficult for cars to pass Mr. Pirit: Last year a Chicago| that street. An ambulance or fire | distributing agency sold the same | truck would aymply tear things up. | territory for $5 to each of 25 men 0. F. i. | that I know of in Seattle. This | If the property owners in that | matter was taken up with the Bet-| block will petition the traffic depart |ter Business bureau, but we have | ment, it should be possible to get one |heard nothing more from it, The|side or the other in the block vacat- ldistributing agency is wanting ed. Since this street is more than 25 lanother $5 for this year's dues,|feet wide, the automobiles have a What can be done? K. |right to stand on both sides, unless Retter Business bureau reports that | you can have one side restricted. they anked the group of men who Play Ae thought they had been defrauded to come in and make affidavits in the ce but that they did not do so. However, the matter was taken up with the National Better Business bureau, and was turned over to the post office authorities for investiga- tion. No report has yet been made, see | lenaly no Mr, Fizit: Why does the Social Welfare league send men to certain stecl works where they overwork them and pay them only $3.50 per day? A man with a family can not live on that. Has the Social Welfare league any favorites to which they send men who must have work? MRS. Y. The Social Welfare league reports several occasions that street cars on| that they send men wanting work to Second ave. going south do not|the factories and mills that have carry “depot” signa. Often I have| 0Penings, and that no favorites are heard strangers ask if the car went Played. It would be impossible for the to the depot, Do you call this good| league to control either hours or municipal service? M. F. W. _| Wages in any of the places to which All cars that go to the depot are| they send the men. The unions are supposed to carry front signs so| S¥PPosed to do that. stating. Any time you see one that ts not properly labeled, put It down as| Two Calitornia state senators, oversight or carelessness on the part, stopped by a policeman for driving of the conductor, and elther call his} 50 miles an hour, escape arrest be- attention to it, or report it to Super-| cause they're members of the body intendent Henderson, which enacted the motor laws, One oes hundred per cent Americans! ~* Mr. Firit: Will you please find! ————— out why radio. station KJR’ Congress and 42 state legislatures (Northwest Radio Service Co.) does are in session. Can't you under not co-operate with the other local| stand, now, why we need to con stations by closing down on Thurs-|serve the forests and other far re day evenings? J. L. BE. | treats? O. R. Redfern, radio inspector for this district, might be able to bring| First prize for officiency this about. Phone him, MA in-5029,| Bernstein, Chicago worker ot ad and ask if there {s anything he can|checks, who paid his fine and his do. lawyer In bad checks! Mr. Fixit: I have observed on Ate Mr. Fizit: Oh the northwest cor- ner of 24th ave. and Spring st. isa pile of fallen brush and rubbien “What is the law's end?” asks an editor. We are not sure, but we think it is a steering wheel. FABLES ON HEALTH MRS. MANN’S WRINKLES RS. MANN, after she had de- followed, is said to be termined to disstoate the) cure, eee wrinkles which had begun to spread] The tre around her eyes, loarned there were] ing the thee Naren ese seat many remedies for thelr removal. plaster are. then applied or nee oO ie if patiently| wrinkled portion, after the wrinkle has been stretched out smoothly Sez Dumbell Dud: with thumb and forefinger. F The freatment must be followed A long time bef Our guses is for a& cs fore results are shen 4 rac seen, and even then Jt must be done oy Mt twice a day. turns it is Another wrinkle cream is made merely to con-||from spermaceti and white wax, template where || @ach one-haif ounce; melt and add he was and || *® them two ounces of oil of sweet not to see where he is going. A Berlin treatment, {almonds and one ounce each of |lanolin and cocoanut. oil, Stir this In an ounce of orange | flower water and 10 drone of ting- ture of benzoin, Pres BY rT Axe paragraphs controverted question the other side, see if you then Once more th tremer States hz raise a United something incor tionist policy. We ha ment by which a part s sig of the enting One Man’s Views ~ Concerning the Dawes Pay and American Responsibility ROWELL CHESTER H. on one dp gg collections under the Dawes plan will be assigned to us in payment of the army of occupation. committed ours s to costs Have we thereby joining in of our any steps to enforce those payments, in e Germany should default? The answer seems to be, quite plain- ly, that we have not. We tained our right to be paid; but we have va a have main- Rows guarded what the irreconcilables regard as stil] sacred. the right to let Germany refuse to pay Us, ang not to do anything about it. This is the way of it: We were to be paid for the costs of our army of occupation out of the eo) from Germany into a second agreement agreement, by which we were ag: but we were not paid. the so-called Wy So we entered adsworth to be paid out those collections, at the rate of about 87,000,000 gog marks a year into a third we enter agreement, to be the same cc the Dawes n, at marks of wh oi 4 under plan. The advantage of t iy that we shall , so long akreemer actually get the mc an Germax tea insist committed bout ft we t we must doing anyth' and they have not committed. Just Who Said So? To which the reply that European authorities do not #o understand it, It would add to the clarity of the if they would quote 4 European authori- tly—but that is not way of senatorial debate. European statesman has we have made any such commitment, or are under any such obligation N uropean statesman has said that in his opinion our interest in the payments is such that when the Germans default we will probably then decide to join with our fellow. creditors in enforcement meas- ures, European newspapers have said thst, and they may or may not e correct, but no representative of any European government has said it. @ 1610 Irreconcilables’ Point It is true that Europe has generally welcomed the signing of the agreement as the re-en- try of America Into the counsels of Europe—but, from every- thing but the irreconcilable standpoint, that is a very differ. ent thing. The irreconcilables, who think we ought not to be in those councils at all, even in matters in which our interests are en- gaged, are logical in objecting to this agreement, not on the false pretense that it commits their wa are irreconcilables discussion these alle tles corre the even You just know he's NO7 well There is no reason for himto look or feel this way | and again we got nothing, « to “sanctions” againat Gy t on the geoenf * they do not wasp o be joined with anybody & anything, good or bad, met ong in the payment debts. <a But very few Americans ney share that view. Indeed, Sime tor Johnson seems to feel tht he is alone in ft. “I seam be alone,” his friend, Mark livan, quotes him ag “All my former associates become international men.” oem Why They Cheer U. S. The real question fs mg whether we are involved in the Dawes plan, but whether committed to join im forcthis steps for its enforcement. &% far as the plan fteelf is om cerned, we have been in it the beginning. We propossd we made it; we financed tt; ast our men are now operating If this paper agreement a last openly acknowledges wht has always been the fact = much the better. It ts on thy tardy frankness that the Eu peans congratulate us Amat’ cans—all except the éwindllg remnant of fi patriotically join im that ment. grour t we have also compromised successors in thelr freedom | cholce when, if ever, Gen defaults. We are to share the advantages of the Dave plan while {t works. 1 7 any corresponding tles toward {t, if It work? On this, the case conclusive, So far as we are o we will gladly accept G money so long as is, to pay, but we will about it if she pref fanit. If this is reconcilables mean canism"—and they “they have their 83 #e€@se5 tf sae You-just KNOW ‘hes well Pe : 4 Z CONSTIPATION DISEASE These young rascals when they are well are the greatest institutions on earth. But when that insidious lurking monster—Constipation— ties up their bowels, then the world is dark. Coated tongue, loss of appetite, bad breath, pimples ness, dull mind areon indications that youan to have a mighty sit donotsee thathis¢ Is are opened up at eg Dr. Caldwell’s SYRUP PEPSI The Family Laxative —telieves constipation. It appeals to the manly little fellow, Father, mother, sister and baby like it too. And for 30 years it has pointed the way to health along Nature's road for all of them. AP SE of Eey sin and aroma Eottles used annually the country prove its! As Easy To Take Grandma's Jam One dose is to! struction, and after that doses will allow Nature! herself and resume her tions. A bottle of Dr. Syrup Pepsin should bei It Is sold everywhere sold—and guaran " Fisk, Your druggist will money if tt fails to do ae pres PEPSIN SYRUP CO Monticello, Hilts tek

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