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eR pa * SPATTLR em TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1925 PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR 1 NE 20 — re | pacman wae — ——— - Vem . a ) r ‘ re . OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS ||| , i 2 ¢ ( 1 ? : igs , welt : by e Mier Zz = "ma | Called tor Honolulu 'g “We ee gy et ls het gener oc Is Called tor Honolulu'@ | Y tr veal! aati aC Bowron ttc, 2 Tremont 4 7 | ha ie — - EEN VN 1 DONT Tan \ meece — Sener ema mater aaa — z HEO Mise | BETT QAn Fr yy ~ en ame: [ A Steady Hand Is*Needed | Ck ance) Wer Fite SY Drck LW! & Ot mien S a piece of diploma Secretary of is concerned—to rap the Calles govern HAR { State Kellogg » threat to Mex ment over the knuckles, and having asked ico has proved a d ere boomerang for it, Washington receives, right back @ to kn but a rap in return with interest ay a Just why no o ‘ to know, bu a ) , . t l The incident is unfortunate coming ' 4 out of the blue Kellogg saw fit to call “ \ ’ t Calle upon the heels of a similar, tho less ig Mexico down and caution President Calles , : wu ; | en 3 } rerics rounding incident in Central America, i { that unless he looks 3 American Al groups of t ~vye » ne is bound to have unfavorable repercu | ; terests down there tle better, the an rate ate Araerion 4 jen . es Mmited State: i aw its support sion thruo A Americs } c t pated pore: ills ara - Minister Summerlin, in Honduras, has 4 ri Japan, 3 *! saab el eh, x , So just served notice on the people of the \@ oP In dealing with mansn me sag cts ted republic that the United States wants less i | ed assumed the vone OF ina ion : ag Pahoa trouble down there and that any attempt ih 1 pice opera ast \mne P p,m Mexico as France might treat ooeegimses to revolution there will have’this country yy ; 5 n a as a protectorate, not as a free and tc daa) with bed a friendly power. It is very important to our prestige | ( HI f . Naturally, President Calles resented the that we maintain good relat with our ; of i , ay Ard action, the tone and the implications. He Latin American neighbors. If Mexico is t Hornbeck, An 3 could have done nothing less. Bluntly, he on trial before the world, as Kellogg told : eal a ne dubs the whole procedure an insult to | (alles, so is the United States on trial be i on hat is s te Mexican sovereignty and flatly informs fore that same vast audience. The world ROO - tome Kellogg that neither the United States is watching the treatment we make out Int yo flo Re nor any other country has the right to of our weaker American neighbors act . i adopt such an attitu A wise head and steady hand is nee : tye aS, £ . The United Stat nt out of its way in the state department. Secretary x e h 4 -—certainly so far as the American public logg has yet to prove he has either iM winder: : : Ma , ba ” ie a Bere Highway Patrolmen Needed ; Let's Watch Ourselves, Too : puters : of a MOTORIST coming from Snoqualmie HILE we are reading the bulletins sek pol “ fy Bia taser, & eattle Sunday, counted 12 Ten were pass to $ wrecked cars along the road. between North Bend and the pass. Several people were injured during the day as the result of an orgy of reckless driving that occurs on the highway each week-end. While economy is all right, and state highway patrolmen are few in number, efficiency would direct that one or more of these officers be taken from the dually patrolled highways adjacent to Seattle to ~ Work on thas heavily traveled stretch of * Toad this summer. There are both police and deputy sheriffs to do the work in and around Seattle. The Snoqualmie pass road is one of the Most popular with local motori It also ds the Sunset highway, over which thou- sands of tourists pour into the Sound country from the East. ’ Drunken drivers, reckless drivers and ; careless drivers obey no rules of law t along this highway, which is unguarded from the summit to North Bend. Tourists coming into this country will receive a poor impression, which being the first, will last, when they are shoved off the road by speed fiends or reckless and intoxicated motorists, or see wreck after wreck of cars along this. beautiful stretch of territory. Residents of the district, who complain . of lack of traffic supervision this sum- = mer, add cynically that before election + last year, two highway patrolmen were i assigned to the district. _ With Bryan and Darrow in training quarters, - maybe Bainbridge Colby is looking for a job as bot- « tleholder, towel man, sponger, or something, at that * Dayton fight. i from the Riffian war front, telling of the casualties there, and while we are digesting the news from China, telling of the death lists that are mounting daily in the trouble there, let us not forget that more than 19,000 persons are killed an- nually by traffic in our own country. Not so spectacular, probably, but an automobile kills as relentlessly as a bullet Dean Inge, called “Gloomy Inge,” for short, says there'll be but one sex in heaven, which may explain the masculine scramble to get there. What's That? TTORNEY CLARENCE DARROW either belongs on the Tennes: of that Scopes case or else he is trying to start a fight between the evolutionists and the professional scientists. “Man,” declares Clarence, “has never laid a hand on plant or animal but he made it worse for living purposes.” If this isn’t rapping the other illustri- ous parties to Scopes’ defense on their knuckles, we would enjoy having gents like Burbank tell what it is. ee side “Pa,” said Willie, “what is an ideal devotee?” “One of ‘em, son,” replied father, “is a tired business man who will auto 12 miles to make 9 holes in 152." Up to Science UCH of lower Asia, the north half of Australia, two-thirds of Africa and one-half of South America are barred to the white man by diseases and deadly in- sects. o wonder that the popular interest in science is developing at a tremendous rate. The scientists must save the race. | 2? Answers to Your Questions ? >? > || Who Will Defend Scopes Tow Usaens O1n2e BY MEA SOMMER, me. co- - How to Care for Husbands and MRS. WALTER FE -RGUSON Babies who slaved y children and obey | men were than of | ‘eventua Those t a genera higheat man being ‘o woman can give the bent to her children who is mep tally subservient or unhappy, nd meeknens is not alwayn the rk of a good mother | Pen Picture of Darrow, BY N. D., COCHRAN — ) What is the best coa for —® i for the bonus Is approved he n t - eo tin or zinc? | can get an answer t0 | | rocelve the bonus ye * dan baie ste man mind dominated Darrow . AL If entirely impervious, cither ny question of fact or in- | not rema. d at‘ the time of the hi Es 8H Are the minal lawyer fin or zinc cogtings will protect| | formation by writing The - | | filing of the claim? oan Jib hetd And with all this, there is yet “ rt editor, 1332 case means fron. As, however, such coatings| | tle Star Question Editor, 1322 | A. No, no bonus will be allowed) |) oP | at ce antasauents much of the child in Clarence Gre almost invariably porous or are| |New York ave, Washington, | | ner ag such payment iy made only) ‘M Lada tppinnnciiaherh ate Darrow. Riding home one day likely to be penctrated by abrasion,| | D. C., and inclosing 2 cents in | | to widows who have not remarried.| “ll bs Md ils pate al Rain rsh tiding hi ne da the zinc coatings furnish bdetter| | loose stamps for reply. No | | frist learning that Darrow is much | during the Loeb-Leopold trial protection because the exposed iron| | Medical, legal or marital ad-| | wat in meant by England re.| 0°? aie Rete natins | after a strenuous day in court Tt c - i] 7 x ‘~ | lawye a a Gdoes not rust as long as zinc is Lpdend ubregy th peed rol | |turning to the gold standard? ime bh ai can a the most re. | Be Noticed from the Illinois = Present in chose proximity. Tin coat-| | dential. All letters must be | | 4 Kince the owtbreak of the| ™ yoy pean: | Central train the tents of the | signed. markable minds In this countr iaam on the other hand, accelerate | & 3 |toar, the Hank of England has deen| i Ringling Brothers’ cireus the corrosion of any crposed tron.| ; ; relieved from its obligation of re-| Hs cor tion with numer “Let's go to the circts to Sait ee river, between Ontarlo, Canada, and) deeming its notes in gold. The free| Spectacular criminal ca : 7 7 night,” he exclaimed. And he Q Where and what are the|Jefferson and Bt, Lawrence coun-| coinage of gold was also suspended.| Cluding the trial of Moyer, Hay: | pant ia wataned papier ane ‘Thousand islands? ties, New York. The treasury issued what are Known | Wood and Pettibone, in Id the Clowns with Keener interest A. They are a collection of small} ees the McNamara brothers, in L i ng with keener fr “islands, numbering 1,700, situated in "an expansion of the St. Lawrence a3 currency notes in addition to the | Q If the widow of a world war! Bank of England notes. veteran remarries before her claim) war and post-war- period the dancer, and wife of a wealthy clubman. . These dogs are not watch dogs. mice. table. them. Ten thousand dollars would the Near Hast. sofa-pillow dogs. patentee n AN ILLUSTRATED EDITORIAL TWO DOGS—$10,000 FNTRODUCING Soutsouki and Mitsouki, two Peking- ese dogs just purchased in Paris by Marcelle Lucas, to herd sheep or cattle. They are sturdy enough to be |) laymates of children or hiking companions of adults, || ey are not hunting dogs, nor do they catch rats or || Soutsouki and Mitsouki do not eat scraps from the |! More attention is paid to their diet than that of a baby. The one thing they can do bes on a silk pillow. Yet their new owner paid $10,000 for save the,lives of many |} babies by providing good milk during such a heated period as this country has just experienced. It would shelp to keep thousands of humans from starving in |! Wate The interest from that sum would keep an old man ov woman out, of the poor house. ‘Ten thousand dollars is a big sum to pay for two t is to sleep “lexport of gold was not pern ) except by licanse. The practice but not of the gold reserve. Bank jthe cat's eyes, nose or mouth. What Folks Are Saying Neco { | JOHN c. FL New York, | motion picture distributor: “Our | company 1 going to break the | monopoly created by producing companies, Theae com panies have excluded from. tho screen some of the finest efforts of thelr competitors.” the large Nor are they able 45 ih MRS, SIDONE GRUEN BERG, Na al Child Study association hildren lead drab, uneventful lives, It is a marvel that youth of thin generation is Aas moral as St is." | oe MISS MATILDA CHRISTIAN teacher, Norway, visitor activities of women are as suming more public importance in. all countries of the worlde The flapper and the vote have been our great advertising | mediums.” RT. HORTON, writer: “Suc | coms in not in achieving what you alm at, but in aiming at what you ought to achieve and preming forward, sure of achievement here, or if not here, | hereafter," £ ey sam During the| to permit export of freahly mined | | gold coming in from South Africa,| of England The recent law pro-| | vides for the abolition of the ex- |port embargo and gives tha Bank | the skin as it is very injurious to the skin and poisonous tf it gets in | Angeles, and Loeb a free| in Chicago, meant much. first d,| Page publicity in newspaper as| and emphasized the crimini lawyer side of Darrow. But the other aside more interesting kindly-sympathetic. ed lover of hi has been is real and the histo: of that Interesting country When he entered upon Loeb-Leopold trial it seemed of modern research on the duc less or endocrine glands two years before the murder young Frank of that case, entist Darrow, the s and student of the has made St that way but it neods a new guttin' today the shade. that has grown on the ground, In winter, L reckon, it's in «tore be mowin! no more: “play, Just try and not mind it work of the day, 4 Leopold It shows the reat-heart fellow men who a student ail his life, | | | | | H | | | | | | | with psy: | | | | ly |of England the license for the ex-| and who Is today a ripe acholar port of gold. The bank must buy} of unusual attainments | gold in amounts of not less than| He {# an omnivorous reader | 400 standard ounces, atthe rate of| with a remarkably retentive three pounds, 17 shillings, 10 1-2] memory. He digests what he | pence per ounce. veads and is a delightful con | she versationalist on most any sub: | Q Is there any substance that| Ject. He has been for years a j will remoye paint from the hair of| student of biology, psychology, Ja cat? | history, philosophy. 1 have | A. Turpentine witt remove it, but| heard him recite trom memory ft must not be allowed to get on| ¢Htire poems: and discuss with | a native of ry the as ‘or ‘or if his reading and study f "years had been in preparation for that particular trial. F he was os familiar chiatry as the noted psycharia ite had triste who were expert w nesses in. that case, 1 heard him discuss the results t fully of In his conduct hu A HAVE to keep mowin’, ‘cause grass keeps on growing’ You get out the mower to trim It down lower The pushing you're doing is ummer you beckon, forgettin’ there’ But, now you have reason to wish for the UN be than show any other of the Laughing quietly at some of the darned foolishness of thie clowns, he turned to me and said; ‘That's the best part of a circus to me.” part During his active life as a lawyer Darrow has been called nearly everything, from social ist to are anar far the other hist, yet his beliefs from one as from Dar fA most charming host On Sunday afternoons in his big brary in an apartment over looking Jackson park, Chicago, At home to his friends, row is Darrow will read aloud for hours to his guests; and will read anything they want to hear, And he whiles away tho time of railroad journeys work ing al cross-word puzzles. 1 think loves than anything else; and love him, Darrow is one of the most tolerant of men. 1 don't think he hates anybody, Hoe doesn't despise any retigion, and seems to have no racial or religious prejudice he children more they This is a feeble picture of the Clarence Darrow who has vol unteered his services in defense of Scopes, Indicted for violating anthevolution law of ‘Ten In that ease he volun teers as a champlon uf freedom of thought and an everlasting foo of ignorance, Old nature in only Inst Week that it looked pretty sleek, You work in the sun and a ittin’ blade. mower’a quite trusty, but often gets rusty. You halt, while the oil's Apread around, Again you are at it; you strongly combat tt mowin' season when you will And yet, Mister Cutter, allow me to mutter that mowing is really just ft that you'll find it relief trom the (Copyright, 1926, for The Star) constantly brewing o song in the the grass u "Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles if of Public Interest —_—. — ete? | Mr. Fieit Can you have | real remedy is more play the pile of sand removed from | grounds a the ieee ia front Being A Bath Mr. Fizit: The backs of some thi pits 0] bead Gh Wa eireet ing room of the public Wbrary eed CH need repairing, Can anything f | be done to relieve the tired Contra re supposed | backs of the readers? & } 1 and gravel as soon ree ehh treet hix | called to this. di a | M at White | Mr. Fixit: The paving be . by beta hie ! w tween the tracks on Jackson pi cae ra ners, ts c p ts have reau F rents { them off the ; j ( A Thought |) sir vier nem | eS ea) yal lone c P. He that oppresseth ‘the poor i reproacheth his Maker; but be if e none 4 & that honoreth Him hath merey dl “ eee pant eas ; on the poor—Proverbs, 1431 pple | ha dona betieen Cs sh Ghat more car car but it can not be [Shock save the poor, feel for | children done now, because of the lack the po: L. Landon | a of funds. z =< == = = @ these loops are continuo! ginning of the inmost ply to the end of the outer. The whole tire thus hasa flex- ibility and “give’’ that is Iacking in tires made by the ordinary method, Cord. broken, silent service. East Pike at Eleventh Flexible as an Indian moccasin, because of the Integral Bead construction—an ex- clusive Kelly method of building which has made possible not only a flexible carcass but also a flexible tread, tough, rugged and safe on wet or slippery roads. For sale by all Kelly-Springfield dealers KELLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRE CO. Factory Brancl 1412 Ninth Avenue Distributors. of Kelly-Springfield Tires and Tubes RUBBER SERVICE Co. Geo. 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