Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Newrpeper Ea- terprise Assn, Qiiman, Niceli @ Ruthman, B veer $3.00, Competitors Help | BRIGHT woman makes a su a lawyer, judge, bank president or governor Everyone h s about her That may be pleasing to her vanity, and when another woman lands in a similarly } exalted position, the first lady may, for * an ‘instant, be a bit jealous of her title as “the only woman who.” Eventually, however, she comes to real- ize that it’s rather nice to have company = and that it is really easier to maintain ; her position when there’s another woman * around doing the same sort of thing. You can always ride a little on the waves + of another's prosperity, if that other is in 4 the same line of business as yourself, A successful novel arouses interest in reading and a second worth-while book finds readier sales. People hear news over the radio and buy newspapers to read the details, because their interest has been stimulated. Now along comes the U. S. Chamber of Commerce with a report on automobiles in the U. S. A. which it is going to read to the International Chamber of Com- merce at Brussels on June 21. It says that the railroads of the coun- try, once fearful that the motor truck would take the transportation business away from them, now believe that it brings them just as much or more than it takes away. Motor trucks are particu- larly useful, the report says, for “minor * Or local distribution functions,” and as “feeders to the main railway truck lines.” Much territory hitherto unavailable to Tailway territory, in some cases not even Qnder cultivation because there was no Way of shipping what was raised, is now ; tied up to the shipping point. “Moreover,” says the report, “railroads have derived much new traffic from the SS aS | direct movement of automobile parts, fin- * ished automobiles, petroleum and road | { Materials.” | t When you get scared over cémpetition, | } Yemember to look a little further than | ; ur nose. E ~Maving to go forth with a» shotgun to keep the owls out of the hair of his people, that Des Moines police chief must be reminded of the good + old days, when mother went over him with a fine 4 toothed comb every time he returned from school. : A Duty of Scientists | CIENTISTS of the department of agri- | i culture having found a dog that fleas : won't stay on, the duty of scientists in _ general is plain. It is to develop that | Kind of dog and, by cross-breeding, make + all dogs flealess. as Naturally, the thought arises that hu- | ; mManity can also be made flealess, if the scientists do their duty in discovering what it is in or about the dog that fleas abhor. It seems to rest with the prefer- ence of fleas, or you might call it their taste. One man may be immune, while Q. Where. is the hottest place in %— cine etmengaenss ssobeewessieee The Seattle St Special Mi 4 Chicage offi Ti BATT L STAR Published Dally md Ave; New * months #2 the fellow at the next desk has to seratch with both hands, and the sporting®editor breaks in with the observation that, in stead of worrying over the descent of man from apes, the scientists had better be working for the descent of fleas from man, since the very dogs are enjoying it. Only 107 be than that ate, in December The Makings | in Washington, but it will hotter when Dawes foregathers with the sen: | HERE are still some who believe in a reformatory possibility and purpose in imprisonment. Take the case of Bill Austin. Bill, after 27 years in Folsom (Cal.) penitentiary, found himself a free man, Old, without friends or a job, and branded a convict, Bill soon got into what he called a little trouble” and, when taken before a judge, said: “Send me back to prison, where I know how to act.” It was in accord with legal custom that Bill go back. But some Los Angeles busi- ness men heard of Bill's case and figured out that it was natural and legitimate that aman who was old, friendless, jobless and “down” should have “a little trouble”; and so they got a job for Bill, wherein he can reform himself, something that the whole state of California couldn't do. It cost those men not a cent—just a humane im- pulse. It may mean the restoration of a | man. A heap of dollars was spent on Bill's 27 years by California, and the result was total waste. Chinese women are organizing to help the || 6 strikers. Look out, civilization! | een V You Liked to Read Him ? ’ Is these days, when the folks are so | th Papers unusually interested in the sciences, Camile Flammarion, the French author | and astronomer who has just died, will | Now, Wou'RE PIERRIE | 4H HAFF BREED @uUIDE AN AN SEZ KITCHEL PIXLEY Sage of the Olymples be greatly missed. | 7: ee : * * seen an item about the | With an unlimited imagination and mocratie. party startin’ a | mighty courage, Flammarion wrote to in Washington, D. | the understanding of the multitude. He leadin’ citizens fa peopled Mars and kept that planet peo- pled, figuratively speaking, and defied all other scientists to unpeople it—which they couldn’t. He scorned anything like ethics, as a professional, and conse- quently had his own peculiar place in popularity as a wri er, Considering the 200 arrests, the plot King Alfonso seems to have been sincere Why Worry? N. HINES, one of the chief : $ that the aircraft sible the successful attack on | Hawaii. | For heaven's sake, let it go at that! | PUrieen. With the mercury stuck at 90 degree xan’ to bomb —%) mitk and water in equal parts Tose | to b the black publican ticket, and | voted Met mentions reduc or the f the re fund is time Ax | : : gan | in some parts and frisking from 90 to 30 | fines sax Jim | | in others, a fight between martial um- | Crow in th | Mca | pires would mean wholesale prostration. | jay iiquor in New York and In. | diana Jand geét the orgunization | P . . ck to the Jeffersonian idea that all democrats werr m | £2 Answers to Your Questions PP | vev1e = the andard, cate Of course, wise d } the world? | ‘OU can get an answer to | : Pa fieroes: A. Recent announcement made by| | aby wosation’ of Cink ce te | 10%, % ORTON ogres, pet énd. roll): SAEe WR SBR ED Te | theNational Geographic society) | formation by writing The Seat { to three-fourtha inch in thickness; oertic cat te won't. ¢ ce | + gives this distinction to Azizia, an| | Star Question Editor, 1322 | | Cut in squares, brush over top with; ALB ee *4nland town of Italian Tripoli. A ew York ave. Washington, | |the reserved white of the egg.) Bryan at the head of the Rum & temperature of 136.5 degrees was|| D. C., and inclosing 2 cents In | |aprinkle with sugar and bake in a| News column. MeAiw cunnil i noted there last summer. | | loose stamps for reply. No | | hot o for 15 | Soclety News‘and Tom Taggart | : ee ew medical, legal or marital ad- | Ly et | “i. And particular 4 Q. Who was Hérodotus? || vice. Personal replies, conti- | Q. Which of the continents has] shoul “be: taken to; pick © A. The oldest historian of Grecce,| | dential. All letters must be | line tongent coast line in proportion Shaver as paymaster, ad | + and the “father of history,” born at) | signed. Fig it eat only livin’ democrat who { Halicarnasgus, in Caria, between |*— —8| A. Europe swith over 20,000 miles, steered the teen cam {490 and 480 B. C.; traveled over| Work in § tablespoons butter with) including the more important in-| PEED ey " aeecahat " 4 Asia Minor, Egypt and Syria as far tips of the fingers. Add two|dentations, but double that length) (ol hog saentact Se hank % 43 Babylon, and in hia old age re-\ eggs, reserving a little of the un-|if the entire shore line is closely wi It ac he beaks ts = corded with due fidelity the fruits! heaten whites and 1-3 cup cream, or! followed. uptey Poubrfocipsl oid \, t of his observations and inquirics,| elect an editorial staff of dem | { the main object of his work being | ocrats who'd neve been convict * to relate the successive stages of| | od home-brewin', evol © the strife between the free civiliza~| L tt FROM R 7 d S | the lynchin’ the 1 thon of Greece and the despotic e ers eader | southern republican vote or * parbariem of Persia for the sov-| STAR havin’ principles on any Import | * ereignty of the world. | All letters to The Star must have name and address. | ant issues. ‘The more imper: | ee puis { |} sonal, unidentified, untrammeled | + SQ. Where is.the Mount of Olives Ap eagle and “the ation of 16464? the staff, the greater the effect | $ Woeated, and what is its height? | Corrects Star How many can explain, at all | of the democratic hee-haw, edi 4 GA. It is a ridge with three sum-| Editor The Star: facurligwalivy «thelr 2). meaniviad? torially speakin’, | mits, stretching north and southeast I notice an item that the We argued and argued—that md wisi | tof Jerusalem, in height 150 fect| world’s tallest smokestack is on Sigs Heyahie Wide sha loved: (6 AWhslstesd da the soll wld=. = above the city, 400 feet above the| Puget Sound, 672 feet high. et art Legule Yak we'd) hov day sun, listenin’ to the sweet “intervening valley of Kedron, and| — You have taken in too much aicutr evanitign. ‘song of the whip-poor-will,” | 2,682 feet above sea lavel., It de-| territory. The smokestack of the On this particular dark No: writes an Eastern novelist. That | “tives its name from the fact that it} A.C. M, Co. smelter at Anacon. vernber (day. (there was'a inileer whip-poor-will was probably out | os at ohe time studded with olive da, Mont., is 585 feet high. There ata: duet atOPat: hewine\ all of doing @ little nightlight savin’. | recs. 8 also one in Japan that is 581 pind’ DEES sich Is sunflower propagated? btn citity p | us high school girls and boys in 4 | 2 7 7 | Pueblo, Colorado, followed his They found 18 cases.of Van } ~ A. From seed. To obtain the You can verify these figures | : bah } data triumphant chrysanthemum. couver Scotch in Lem Atwater’s seeds let the heads stay on the| by writing the Anaconda Copper | 4.) ligast Nextt ft Ack: (aH: Lamihex ] “plants until the seeds are almost| Mining Co. office in Butte, Mont. anecdote ptcto tht Shp Babi caic zn Sete a9 Teady, to scatter. Then they can K. 0. SCRI R, | lathand-plaster terra cotta min: plained that he used it in Me Be removed cither wlth a curry oF ourthihve, eral palace. By the grotesque | hath. Justice Potter discharged | « Comb or by inverting the heads and ebony representation of “King Lom, sayin’ that from personal _ rubbing them over a wire screen| * with about a half-inch mesh. The Attacks Coal" we listened to him. Bryan | He had rather a knowledg prominent aroma of -saeeds should then be spread on a Editor The Star; Reading “bay window’ at that time, ani bath canvas to dry. | about Bryan and his prepara I was pushed up against it, or missin’ f ey tions to enter the lists against that is, under it, by the pressure the last 1 Q. What is an artesian well? A. A well made by boring the dark per-| a shining knight cohorts of ‘evolution; of the crowd. I could not, es- in armor ualne | CAP? so I shook his hand once, Melancton that and sim accessories hadn't been the | | rom Lem'’s person in | | | | | he knew ateh, Sweet says: Pendicularly into the carth. The old-\ for his battle ery, “What shall twice, and yet again, ‘Such a noticeable that some folks "est known well of this kind was| we do with Jesus?" and “Where shinging - opportunity to. pross in’ omic waate on jagunk in Europe in 1126. | Wave they Jain. my Lore the hand of greatness was not fore those who have A Thia brings to mind funny to be neglected. And he, with been pay ore for Se | Q. How are Scotch scones made?| incident which happened in 1896. his eagle glance roaming that | ently K | A, Miz and sift two cups of flour,| Does anyone remember those of upturned faces, never a, » 4 teaspoons baking powder, & tea-| other powerful slogans, Free the difference, nor cared | spoons sugar and 1-2 teaspoon salt.) and unlimited coinago of silver’ for individuals, 1 even doubt What Folks | See 3 is ver Re Oe ut very much if he cared about the e } truth or righteousness of his A Si Y aise re oaying RCRA AE eT: rel a TES Yoolloo ‘OO-HOO there, Tommy and coolin’ off swim? Up Our suits and be right on our way Willie and Jim, what and it’s over yer head, Let's fix « springboard as soon's | on, kids, I'll show ya the right way to dive. + Anyone here got a watch that ts right? tonight. Gee, Mom geta mad when I'm late for a lickin’; I know how it feels, Took out for glass—you'll be cuttin’ yer toes, up our clothes. Four healthy splashes with shout, “Gee, the water is great (Copyright, 1925, for The my meals Let's all nary @ w Star) Lot's call our baseball game off for to ‘Member the place down by Farmer Jones’ shed? The I gotta be home for my supper Tho effect of his eloquence on the crowd—plastic ax putty In his hands—that was all he cared for, Applause to him was the wine of fife, | Similarly o £0 for a) tion yand grab! fi uum: many sel now, quarrel, staying in in this evolu. his chief concern the limelight by way now ther ory as te swaying. tho multitude with tho velopment of life whieh will water 1 clear| magic of his “silver tongue.” seem mbre plausible. we arrt Come it few poorly-pald, hard te Ae working men and women in ‘Ten: DR, W. D. HAGGARD, Vres nessee, teaching what they be- American Medical association: and I don't want] lieve to be true and right on evo “Altho the heart js only one lution, thereby lose thelr jobs, inch from the surface the agree not to knot} what ia it to him? But the op ody, 20 centuries of surgery ait, Pour voices} portunity to “speeohify"’ 4 rolled by before the everything There hin zest could tra the Like an old war hor | you haye eoret of RABBI Cleveland all eager to rush capable ¢ into the fray, Perhaps we shoul: with the let him alone to enjoy himself we have MIM, SIGNI 8, CONDI" capable Southworth, Washington. tench ies he weenty the “hfar off, and | Hate we ML PW MEN DE AUR ETAT LEONARD curator U, 8 lution, one STHINE National | “Tho undoubtedly lentisia believe im evo. | hundred years from © may bo another thes > the creation and de Hoalpol vel that inch.” [ WOLSEY, mon who t# af reconciling religion revelations of God, them in xclenee, i in of understanding or | religions" UIs | | | as CONFLICK FER TH’ HAND OF TH’ RUM RUNNERS DAUGHTER, TH’ WINNER WINS HER, Ne oC BY WILLIAM 3) = Ld MY GOSH, \WE @ OTTA FIGHT T \ € IM A RoviL MOUNTED SEE WHO HASTA POLICE - AN WE HAVE A TAKE HER. AN’ TORRBULL HAN T HAN’ GIT HER, an Au ars) | STORY NO..3 Seek New Continen BY RUTH FINNEY TH’ LOSER SAUD | TRINLLIAMS 601 “ly “1 aM eae BY MA SERVICE. mC, | How Explorer M’Millan Will t in North the th | short wave radio net, operated J if | with a battery but ineffective in oan tak the Movth lana canshee the air because of interference 13, Other eles will follow the ignition system. In dally —The ¥ of a forced landing, this set RRS hai | 1 be able to communicate W ASHINGTON, Juné 11.—Pet | with the base ship and probably haps an we sit sweltering with the outside world, It is 0 August heat this summer,” th atter eet that the officers radio will bring ux volcan of al omplish the hith me n the A cirele sing feat of carrying heir f | from the Arcti The most remarkable radio | cirg ic pments of the ye ex | In the broadcasting pected to folle ets on the two planes, the expe eh the MacM on bane ship 1 be supp and a th two fivekilowatt transmit party One will be similar te ear the for United this me, radio commu be a plerced between es of latitude, but t a five supplied by Dr ° n is confident it s elaborate preparation for will be able to accomplish this, communication will probably pre even tho it will have t nd clude the danger of the MacMil. with the 24-hour Arctic ¢ lan expedition disap into KE. F. MeDonald of | the frozen north and the t of the outside world in anxiety as to it >» equipment expe , g nets for transmitting on 2 40, 80 and 180 meter 5 rt inartz, USNRE in radi of radio communication is even more cer fliers will take with them, to be f necidents ation im: . io commu Ar Tomorrow) | THURSDAY U.S. May Rescue Grain * Marketing Company C. A, RANDAT ee sis a oes t erni 1 to avoid the ¢ rh ie: Chicago la ne . C. Shaffer & ¢ f t t enment the American farm bure t eration, who had made ‘ f f of ers. A number of the farm bu sbi’: me the boom t t {fort Sie Mae all the ‘ : : Ae pa And then the the sharp the officera of the new company line Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles if of Public Interest Skea A ites st } Mr. Fixit: My own little dog, had been printed, it is my Nig, has wandered away, and I | opinion that the cops would teish any one who may sec | have been mobbed. RL her would return her to me. | Police officers have to deal Khe has a black head and black with many dangerous charae- apots on her back | ters, and naturally they are in- 7531 35th Ave. N clined to handle them without Mr, Fixit retired from the lont gloves, and where an officer is dog business some time ago, | handling such characters he but this Ay a « where he is | should have the sympathy 1 willing to break the rule. If | support of the public, long any one has seen Nig, as he is not brutal and does help restore her to her | not lose his head, Mr. Fixit oy a8 | does not know enough about Mr. Fiz My husband and | this particular case to give an 1 recently went to play tennis opinion, bu at the court on Harrison st, be- | the facts t on 19th and 20th N We have an found a sign up saying that to furnish. court was reserved between the CHP Te. hours of 7 and 9 Sunday. I Mr. Fixit: Recently I visited think this was done by some | the little church *yard ia Su- young people who wished to use | quamish where Chicf Seattle the. co Have they a right | 4s buried, and was surprised to to do this? | see how little attention has been MRS. R. J. paid to keeping up his grave. Not any more than you would Is there’ not some one in Be- to put up a sign there attle who cares? ing that all youngsters | TOURIST. yuld be either at mass or in | If it has not been done be- school from » 10 | fore, some Seattle organization Sunday mornings. The park | that is look for a worthy board reports that mo such | job, should take this matter up reservations are. made at these | on a permanent basis. Who Courts | wants the job? diene | Mr. Fictt: In regard to the | CALVIN HAS MADE A SPE- shooting of Robert Goodman cial visit to Corcoran art gal last Friday, do you think he got | to study the painting ‘The a fair deal from the policeman Only Hope.” Gosh! Maybe that who shot him? If the facts all hobby horse has busted from expedition (Another In order to meet all possible | === = contingencies, navy planes that | fly to the pole will be equipped | with two different kinds of radio One nayy plane will carry aft a stand. | spark net while the which & powerful only | plane is in the alr, aa ite oper tion depends on a wind-driven will be used for with the planes | generator, It communications bane hip while the flight Another are in plane will, carry a SCIENCE -——\ | DISTANCE CURES ) I of Hlneas not carrying doctors are now being diagnosed and tr ed from thro the use of radio. This work is being carried fficers of the United Stat lic health service, Their consultations are | held in the offices of marine hospital No, 70, New York | > On freighters and other com- | paratively small boats, a doc- | tor seldom is carried. ‘The cap: tain generally has a medicine chest and perhaps some know! of first aid, and he doctors ick and injured. With the ANY board canes on ships shore vered that the captain | could describe the condition of a patient to the skilled doctors of the health service, and the could then send word back how to treat him, » This resulted in 1 regularly organized depart ment for this work Not only have many cases been properly treated In this fashion, but there have been a number of successful opera: tions performed by members of the crew, with improvised in strument unc radio di from doctor on shor EASY SMOKING ROOM |) STORIES | tions G67 had « very dull boy in my classes. when [taught school," suid the starved looking person in the smoker, who was “achool tercher, “This lad knew no 1 of Latin than a tom cat does about abstinence, told him that if he did not get his Latin in better shape, L would have him take up Greek, So, as a final trial, T asked him one day, ‘John, translate Pax in Hello.’ “John spoke right up, ‘Stom achache," A Thought ) apa) A son honoreth his father, and wm oservant His muster Mal, 16, lose ming honor, ye if myself, Shakespoure, I lose | ash Childrens Clothes the CLOROX way - Sold by All Grocers : MOTHERS! Those play-soiled frocks and blouses that pile up so discouragingly each wash day can be made snowy white with CLOROX. This bottled magic will bleach even the feet of the white cotton socks that look as if they had trudged “all the way to London town—yes, and back again, sir.’ You will not mind how dirty the children’s white clothes become when you | no longer have to rub them white. There are two approved ways of washing with CLOROX— both of them easy. Some women find it more convenient to soak their white clothes in a solution of cold water and soap, to which has been added CLOROX in the proportion of one tablespoonful toa gallon of water. After soaking fora few hours or overnight, they wash the clothes in the usual way. Other women use CLOROX in the above proportions in the first | rinsing water, then put the clothes through a rinsing of clear, cold water, and one of bluing. In addition to its use in the laundry, CLOROX is invaluable for removing ink, fruit, coffee and other stains from white linen, cotton and mercerized fabrics. It also bleaches drain boards and hardwood floors, and keeps sinks, enameled utensils, bathtubs and toilet bowls spotlessly white, The label on the CLOROX bottle gives instructions for these and many other uses, « ‘ eayto MANUFACTURED BY CLOROX CHEMICAL CORPORATION, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA %