The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 23, 1925, Page 6

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ISDAY, JUNE 28, 1925. ———y F gage — mes - — —+— — = - ——_—— ————$—$—$———$_————— ceased ' OUT OUR WAY * BY WILLIAM ;) a, R / Fi d Al ; y ora pone ___*_PY¥ WILLIAMS!) 49 000,000 Peons Revolt | Newspaper ia Keearaet <== a = . : ’ ’ a oe Pa: rrossino | uninnie ‘ Fue ea, " \i Againsi Serfdom Prose Bervien | sthicn Ave; New i 1 THINK IVE GOT NO YO AINT! L Gor \ | g ahA p rf Sears. Te Aik baler civ the par ceeh, b meoainn FLOR # monthe 62.00 |You BEAT ON Ou BEAT TOK | . BY WITLJAM P. SIMMS Joh Adair aaaallaindlbctdh Meat | THIS HOLE CORLYs) | FivE STROKES FER TH | —E el . } } , P | FOUR STROKES BALL ANDO ONE FER | are opposing Calles Enough! Let Us Up! ; Death's Defeat \ cor THe BALL ren ete -R | wae ceteanis GLO hls’ ‘Oew © BAS Darwin, Scopes, Darrow, Bryan, N his last minute on earth, La Follette Wr| ano THREE To Is HEAH ‘WE cad «his plans, ‘ judge and jury, the whole of that raised himself on his bed, He wanted S\ 1 y. . es BNI ¥ eet) ve hin w i Tennessee layout! The honorable grand to say something, What? \ ee : MANS ‘ene we 5 WITA Ay ili | # oven r i jury of Clatsop county, Oregon, has as It matters not, good old “Fighting \ os NOY AFTOH THIS? Cae d viitiioant ta 14 sumed the pressure in entirety. On June Bob.” Your whole life has cried out, * | 9, A. D,. 1925, the Clatsop county grand “Fight injustice, no matter how high | jury returned the following finding: enthroned, no matter what the odds!” if © Kelloge-Callea | | The grand jury confesses, with certain The lips falter, close, The spirit untroversy over the violation of and sorrowful regret, that the preponder- marches on. American ond other foreign ance of deliberation was given to the con- a ; ; rege wh Rees gta is } apy Py rp mee ; : re) > enc el ‘onsiderable moral progress in Chicago, Only two Of Mexice 0,000 el | s ‘ s 8 ce; a ants, moetly Mliterate peons © irres y j r. dian origin. Under Dict “ NT and irresponsibility of life in and out A Famous J ictory Indian origin o J SEEN BY Diaz, 98 per cent of these were armpere were many princely os TH’ PAPERS” tates with hundreds of thous \ BBS of aores, A dozen ranged from BY KITOHEL PIXL 000,000 to 20,000,000 acres, or 4 SAUTIFULLY embos of the home itself is in a great measure to be blamed for the fact that the morals and morality of a considerable number of the younger generation have deteriorated to that condition where youths and maid- HAT capture of Hawaii was a mighty funny affair, according to’ Com- mander Sidney Ballou, speaking for the navy. The islands’ defenses were sadly outclassed, or sadly missing altogether, as ed ar ens, mere children, know little or no re- tee ° f Anke ha howell fr , ie Meee ne nai 2) vlog happ congratula straint of the baser passions which de- e td mn Mit seal ants i kt ile Ae les | FO a he Bata Ok ons, pettin’s proud be stroy those fine things for which civiliza- DaSiN®. 2100S WOR Mdoe er Neon Ds a forelos 23 people owned 99 per tory, whole ale sur shine for tens of thousands of graduates turned out on the world this June. And, here and there, a lonesome sad - eyed, maybe ne lected, boy or girl who * flunked.” r who suc- Pizley To such, a as the first to Ititle left-handed baccalaureate d never be @ real sermon by your Uncle Kitchel There’! point in your rth worryin miles at sea, and the,islands blazed away at it for several hours before it made any reply. Altho admittedly not up in war strat- egy, we gather that what the islands re- | quire at once is 6,000 more troops and | innumerable planes, submarines and 145- | mile guns. Even then, a Jap fleet might sneak up thru 145 miles of intense bom- | bardment, throw a hook into the blamed things and tow them off to Nagasaki. nt of all tho land If by any chance w peasant got hold of a farm, the odds were | against his holding on to it. In der to get for himself and fam- | fly the barest of necessities, he usually had to go to work for tion has striven ever since differentiated spiritually from his less fortunate con- 5 temporary, the ape. Geewhillikins! The dreaded county grand juries have got our ancestry by the short hair! a “The four men arrested by the prohibition police + Were innocent,” says a Chicago paper. It’s an al- mighty shrewd police force, that can hunt down four innocent men, in Chicago. some big hacter er. Ile tance of f ground taken from him for debt, then work the rest of his life to pay the balance, Ho became vir- tually a slave. Hence the word peonage in our own langue President ceeded Diaz, see Mexico nation so long as such a system prevailed. He 4 to change ; it, but was murde! Then fol fu Avoiding the Squeal RESIDENT COOLIDGE, after a ‘<r year’s sincere consideration, rejects P the tariff commission’s recommendation that the tariff on sugar be reduced, large- ly because the reduction would cost the La Follette’s dead, but Iiving still is what he did | and sald. STR Lbaas A RAYTUNG CLOSE GAME & +3 2 1ees YMA SERVE tc What’s the Farmer Thinking About? Don’t Kick—Yet! © ROM Seattle to Boston the weather has been “unusual,” in some parts | treasury $40,000,000. the mercury engaging in a drunken jazz rege sae 3 | about Did ou. do the best that It is a method of economizing with the | dance; but before you go to kicking on i a h “od Radea! eigen armed 4 you? Ease your heart of least amount of audible squealing. The | the present “unusual,” read what your This Is What One Wrote to the Editor of The Star! anetitation in while Car- eae Fas prmeercl Naibee millions of sugar eaters who pay the $40,000,000 don’t declare their hurt and, a of course, big sugar business is quietly Psy _ happy. 2 Simply, the costly tariff commission, which is supported by the sugar eaters, laid an egg that spoiled in the hatching. grand or great-grandparents got. In 1816 there was a killing frost during every month of the year. The only corn matured in Vermont that year was nursed thru the summer with the aid of huge thru « fun: bonfires. That year is still known in Ver- Wall, you milssed something: mont as “the mackerel year,” for so poor renza was president Article 27 of that constitution called for a land reform. Obre- gon and Calles, Carranrn’s suc- cessors in office, have been t ing to put it thru Mont Max a water and everything, every hill | that there were some 19 rods | God nor man demands your tri umph, but just that you reap clean accordin to the size of the sickle given you. Yours truly speaks from many y tion of men and wamen, and, be- sides, he almost graduated from an Ohio college. The students of Editor The Star billy has turned his dratted cat- of fenve gone from this place. tie loose on the public domain, There were shrubs, and polson and I've been hearing the pooth- oak apd alder, and fir, ond cedar, ing murmur of the vagrant cow and windfalls, and head-high bells drawing closer each eve brackpn and everything in that ning Sir and Brother—Did you ever endeavor to run a barbwire fence fean peasants live !n There is a corner of the wood cornof of the wooded pasture. A odie nia peonten ee _—— + | were the crops that farmers were obliged ed pasture that I hadn't visited This morning 1 found nix fing phore to’ audi ittecietayah preheat Premier Painleve is collecting “votes of confk | to barter what they could scrape together for 10 years; I Just took it for strange cows, and three helfers, dim qrail, wrapping barb There aro some - The prin. | be fired pronto, yours truly and reform ts | Signed it three times, the presi- 50 .“commor | dent noticed this and the trus- enough land so that | ‘es didn’t fire the president, may have a few However, there isn't a colle ing from 7 to 68 | OF school in the land that is Gence.” It seems customary to rete much confi- 3 2 : e dence to the French statesman and then kick him | for mackerel to sustain them thru the and went on about my other out with both feet. winter. No pork feed was raised, hence business, What with the high : x oy ee 3 the hogs died early in great distress. : Now Watch ’Em Kneel June 17, 1816, a snowstorm swept granted that {tewas atill there, count, In the orchard. Back the ‘wire-stretcher cipal idee tracking the herd, I discovered emergency wagon-stretcher— | to add to having the dumb thing let go and see the wire whixs by, just jo by yourself? No? | | and more calves than I can | your/suffering back, heay | | | . A 7 . , ° an you were ready to stick « | REETINGS to Don Jose M. Vidal across the Northern states. In the East- H W P tanie in the critical post | acres, depending upon fertility | sullty of a miserable sin of omis- Quadras, famous Madrid portrait ern states, by nightfall, roads were OW e re rogressing ® Te i feous” peril Se bar 1 < pe a | sion at graduatin’ time. Every- lage would recelve | one of them should assemble ge some, 6,000 acres, their “flunkers’ and read to es stand to them two things. First, that fine tie land. On | Story about the Scottish king watchin the spider build and re- build her web, Next, this from my lifelong friend, Mr, William blocked with snowdrifts. From three to five inches of snow fell thruout New York and New England,:and a survey showed that nearly every crop north of | the Potomac river was ruined. This was wire by yourself thru 30 rods of Away From the Gallows || iju’¥ tnt to gcollut. BY RUTH FINNEY painter, just arrived for a whirl in the 7 U. S. artistic world; greetings and re- peat! And we're going to clasp him to our inartistic and disturbed bosom as the ne plus ultra, sine qua non, nonpareil, lose comparatt, the other hand, the moderate- nized estates may very well be Well, what I was starting to say was, that I bad a typical | time this glad young summer ASHINGTON, June 23-—If a rt . zt | ar % At that time 249 different of- | 4 stuck in 16 bo wiped out, since the law guar- i real-stuff umpire on female beauty. | a Se winter anew storm, and there was John ‘Themes’ Scopes had. .| fenecs wore puntabable by death prada and when Tete my eae | antes much landowners may re- Shakespeare: ‘Spanish women’s knees,” decides Don | &nother one almost as severe on August beon up for trial 200 years ago | inthe United States. Kentucky a tied back on my bead, together tain only 120 acres. “This above all: To thine own ; Jose, “are the most beautiful in all the 80. The frosts extended as far south as on a charge similar to that he ts hundred years ago retained 19 of with a segment of my nose, and a Admittedly there are tnjus- self be trus, | ___ world because they spend much time on ass Carolina. now facing, hie ite not merely these capital erties, Prtete ex- silce of my left eyebrow, I'm go- tees ta the working out of Ets And 8 saat follow, as the night : ‘ 7 8 z his job—wou! ave depen eo wore held in one as ing down and out throat on now land law. But Calles’ reply | o day, _ them in prayer. unseasonable weather of 1816 was upon the verdict of his fury. late as 1906. = aap os Thou canst not then be false to Looking at American women’s knees— Enough said! And anybody throwing pop bottles at Umpire Jose gets put off also marked by the appeerance in tha heavens of sun spots plainly visible with- out the aid of a telescope. And today the Dorothy Ellingson probably will not hang for the murder of her mother in San Francisco, but Today etx states ave no capt. tal punishment. There have been no executions in Michigan since that fence and for once realize a profit on my farming. Respectfully, WILLIAM DENT. is that no great reform such as this has ever been accomplished without some tnjuctices being done. any man.” Of course, a diploma fs a fine prize. But the winnin of ft is a ! astronomers are notici % wg if the laws of 200 years ago wore 1862, and none In Wisconsin since Calles says he “will never be a resi = the grounds! pear ing “unusual” sun being enforced today, not Doro- 1853. Kansas, Maine, Minnesota h h traitor” to these 12,000,000 peo- pesth « imesger typlieamiant se : —————— | fe thy ulono, but hundreds of boys and South Dakota have abolished | I ple of Mexico now “on the fringe very best, whatever that may be. ce a hyn makee ares * ee sinter sound The portals of the 1 D a and gi would face death on the death penalty more recently, | A oug t of civilization” trying to break pratt there may be cheer ane one E court's rg he oy sine eaeinis fatiaoscoias, potag when A tame wenainees pore 1 pete the gallows, for then {t was a Towa and Colorado first abolished their bondage of poverty, {gnor- couragement to “flunkers” in the 190 } t @ his mother-in-law. ”: get in by sneering at Adam Shag capital offense for a child to ft, then restored It Beloved, lot us love one anoth- ance and disease. observation that among those “curse or smite” his parents. er; for love ls of God; and every- Today there is a peasant par- In these two instances the That } son! 25 etat sat ncaa 3 one that loveth is born of God, | ty, the agrarians. They have who never came within 40 of a diploma are Ford, Edison % “f i progress of the country away | {sem Inwhichhangingislegalto- | sot i weth God—I John 4:7, caught a gleam of light ahead | Rockefeller, Bastman, Harriman, i ‘ > P Answers to Y our Wwe t from capital punishment may be ; onan e and they are fighting toward It | Duke, Frick, George F. Baker, k “ STLONS marked But there are still reminders of IH spirit of Lore, wherever | —sometimes blindly, sometimes Robert Dollar, Jim Hill. Wool. é | In the recent action of congresn | the stern old times on the stat- tts, is its own blessing and {| cruelly. They would walk over | worth and « host of others who | substituting the rio chair for ute books. Even today one may | happiness, because it In the truth Calles today were he to go back met their “flunks” in life with Q Héw many servants are em- 3—————8_ Q. wil you name some of the) tho gallows In District of be put to death in Maryland for | nq reality of God in the soul— | on his promices. all the capacity that the Loni : ployed at the White House, and|/ YOU can get an answer %@ | iinay of “balls” used by major| Columbia, the foes of capital pun- netting fire to a haystack or out- i Powerful Interests in Mexico had given them. K. P. i ne what is the amount of money ap-| | any quertion of fact or | inanad tlesaece Seieabat dea ticinecheertee and house; or in Delawasy for ex- eR propriated by congress for its up-| | rocretion by bag re ier | |, 4: The drop, the raise, outcurve,| a hope that completa abolition of hibiting falae lights by which a ; keep? | tle Star Question Editor. 1328 | |incuirve, fedeawcay (never used suc-| the death penalty is not far | Vessel ts sunk and lives are lost A. There are about 69 servants! ashington, | | cessfully except by Christy Mathew-| away. Legisiation enacted for Arizona and Tilinols may demand | for the White House and grounds, | D. nd inclosing 3 cents in the extreme penalty for perfury, ‘ | son), drop curve, spit ball, jum: the district often In expresaive and congress appropriates about! | ps for reply. No y ee, | 1] aT vict: A death | bali and outdro; of country-wide sentiment on an cauning tho conyiction and death : | | medical, legal marital ad- ?. jountry ee i | Geral halle a nae Diget beeen veritas: ona | Sis i {seue, nnd since this is the cage, | of 88 Innocent person. In New epee o. | | dential. All letters must be || Q Should one make a practice of | It 1s logical to believe that hang- phi ey ek diate ps heaton bse a | [ signed. | |drinking a glass of water before| {ne at least will soon be a thing scape py a capital crime must forfeit his fo Georgia puts to death thore Q If an American citizen wishes | ¥. ——————— | breakfast? In {t considered bene-| of the past to vistt several countries of Europe | fictal to one’s health? | Fifteen states already have must he have a passport for each|tory of Tierra del Fuego, Argen-| 4 4 oiasy of water, either hot or| abolished hanging and execute of the countries visited? | tina, on the south coast of the island) 14 Woon araing or before break-| thelr criminals in the clectric who burn a railroad brid; sa A. Only one passport ts required|0f Therra bait j depagialy dated Beagle! saat, is very beneficial both as an| chair. Utah allows condemned North Carolina, Virginia and Os of an American citlzen traveling |Channel it tee i eres enru the| 24. to the cleaning of the system| men to choons whether they Delaware hang for burglary In y thruout Europe. If he" wishes to) village, whose in sitios ‘an{ and to the general health. Many| shall be shot or hanged. Neva- | the first degree and Alabama for visit several countrics of Europe, he| efforts of English missionaries, sper must specify it in his application.| English better than Spanish, The He must obtain a visa of the coun-| population is estimated at about da, casting about for a painless robbery, The death penalty fs exacted for train robbery In 2 physicians recommend this as a regular habit. A glass of hot (not way to inflict death, hit upon if | 500. warm) water before meals will aid the lethal gas chamber, which vada, robbery with deadly weap- “4 eet, of cach country he scishes to} %M- aiamae | digestion. The juice of half a lemon| aroused such a storm of protest ons in Texas, and arson in Ala- 3 wisit. Application for vieas must de| lin a glass of water before meals} when it was tried, but which In- bama, Delaware, Louisiana, ; at the nearest foreign con-| Q For how long did Georges Car-| ig Good for helping a sluggish) dicated more plainly than any Maryland, Mississipp!, the Caro- ae rere scr, Ss: Country, pentier hold the world’s light heavy-! jjver, other one thing the general re- linas, Virginia and Vermont. Be ae Teer, mene ioenue ee vulsion against tho brutality of But these penalties are so for- Q. Of what In water glass made?| legalized murder, eign to the general temper of the The Owt celebrates its thirty-third birthday with a memorable three- day Anniversary Sale A It 4a the capital of the Terri-| heavyweight championship from!) | Battling Levinsky by a knockout in) q ciear hard solid that dissolves| tiofiary war the United Staten has law is seldom invoked and few W hat Folks Jersey City, N. J. He held the title) sirup, In the preservation of eggs| manitarianism still exist on tho statute books until September 24, 1982, when he|q very thin solution 4s used, one Battling 64K, at Parts, France. tsi — ee ee Letters FROM Read ret EDITOR MacALARNEY, La- | | etters STAR eaders | BP of the Sahara desert and how 1m | Baa atisione tauast wate alarpennet FINDS ETHER @ Where Is the city of Ushuala?| A. He won the world’s light! A. Water glass 4a sodium silicate, Since the days of the revolu- people that the full power of the four rounds, October 12, 1920, at! giowiy in water, making a thick| traveled a long way toward hu- persons know these provisions Are Saying was knocked out in six rounds bY) part of water ylass to nine parte of | / Q What are the boundary !ines| ———__._ s(TENCE, dies’ Home Jou: “The man | ‘All letters to The Star must have name and address. 4 good, accurate ‘color story’ in a | ‘A. The desert of Sahara has no = . short space of time has no place | very precise boundary lines, but ands Purchase true, Anyone who has tried to I h da F d S t- fn journalism. The public wants |roughly speaking it {s about 3,000) HE Einstein theory, which Defends operate an auto that was young urs > rl a b) a to know the Interesting little | miles long and covers an area of, seomed established, has had Editor The Star: when Adam was a boy will know things that go to make up the |not lesa than tuo million square| a setback mosaic of life. So-called ‘color miles, stories’ are absolutely essential ° Q What in the foreign born population of the United to the modern newspaper.” a bce JOHN T. MILLEN, motion | gtaten? picture machine distributor: | A, According to the 1920 cenaua, “Moving pictures of industrial | the native born gubjects have opened a new | 789,928 and the foreign born popu- bf lation ia 13,920,602 field of selling Maton To ES’ give me a melon; a big, ‘round, ripe melon off of the vine. I'll pick out a spot in the shade melon that’s really all mine, Tl sit me down quick and I'll eat myself sick southern atyle. But shucks, it's so good—would Wor, no matter what comes, it's worth while No kiddin’, I'm tellin’, I'm cravin' a melon, Aw, one—full grown. "Tis the last time I'll ple and next year I'll be growin' my own, (Copyright, 1025, for The Star) The thought feast makes me sigh. Just think what's in store when you've to the core, with the juice wquirtin’ up in your eye It's likely, gosh knows, that I'll ruin my clothes, if I eat in tho real reached | | i On Aw green ‘onuse I'll eave ry seod | | An important part of the Ein- stein theory is based on tho problem of the ether. ‘The the- ory of the ether—a hypothetical substance permeating — every: thing—was once generally ac: cepted. Einstein doubted the ether, It was not necessary In his calculations. His findings were based on the Mighe Morley experiments, at Caso * School of Applied Science, Cleve. land, Ohio. ‘These experiments showed that the existence of tho ether could not be proved Prof, Dayton C. Miller, of the Case school, recently repeated these experiments at Mt, Wil- non, Pasadena, Cal, As the re sult’ of 6,000 ob@rvations he | Announces that he finds a defi nite ether drift—®nnt is, that the ether surrounding and per. meating the earth is dragged along with the earth as the | earth travels around the sun If thin Js sustained it will be tho most Important discovery of | modern nelence. Ty abolishing much of the Einstein theory, Ite will mean clearness and sim plicity of thought and expres: gion with regard to all nature Under the Hinstem theory, few persons can expect to under stand the fundamentals of phya. foal selene. Tho Rainior Valley street car line purchase seems to be of principle interest just now, and Iam sure the most of us bellevo the city should take over the “line. There can be no comprehen- sive development or expansion of the lino until such is the case, ‘Tho valley ts for the most part settled by workers, and there are a great number of cheap lots available for homes, ‘The only setback ts the transporta- tion. The people should know thera can be no development in the valley until the transportation tn put on a par with the rest of the clty Our ast carline venture, the high price pald, the mayor's sud don resignation and his move mont to within easy distance of the Mexlean border have made people susplelous of carling deals Some think the counoll offer for thé line too high, but It must bo remembered the counc!t (Qi had experts engaged for montha In putting a value on the prop: erty, and are fo doubt In pow nsession of facts on which their bids are based. The charge that the equipment in antiquated andi@annot be op- erated at ‘a profit is probably whore the profit goos. With the light department tak- ing over the furnishing of power {t should make a profit, as what was lost in one way will be gained in another, R. OLSEN, 3817 Eddy St, ont Sparkie Gets Home A number of letters have been rocelyed by tho editor in negard to Sparkie, the homeless aire. dale in the clty dog pound. Unfortunately for the many who desired to give him a home, the dog was taken care of soon after the story was pub- shed and long before any let. torn arrived Tho , however, wishen to who kindly offered to provide a home for Sparkle, NEW YORK POLICE RE. eslve an average of only 3,000 complaints of liquor violations por Week, showing that some of the New Yorkers have been re. formed already, or dled. TIEY'VE ARRESTED A SPO. Kano autoiat for trying to run over a dog, Pedestrians must bo getting too easy or livellor than the dogs. urday, June 25-26-27 Watch your newspaper!

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