The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 29, 1925, Page 6

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i terprive Anan Ave. nea My | ara The Seattle Star “ane 1307.09 Seventh Seattle, W Publishing Co, Nicoll & Ruthman | and United ee & Ruthma Phone MAin» | Press Service, Tork offi ones. | By mail, out of « as year $4.00, By - Entered as second clase matter at Seatthy Wn, under act of March 6, 1879 Hy AS TO PU NISHIN G YMING next as a matter of quite gen- thik eral interest is the appearance of Bishop Brown's case before the genera Buh Racretaryy } convention at New Orleans, concerning | which one noted Eastern writer on reli- gious irs says: BELIEF the of full of Riffs. aviators’ purpose to bomb the the warning wille not help a large number of dead Riffian non. course | combatants, blown to bits by our aviators 'y Kellogg is to be praised for getting on the job as soon as somebody pried his eyes open, ry “Tf the Protestant Episcopal church Z 7 a kd : nahin waves ; decides that a bishop is at liberty to WOL LD YOU BELIEVE IT? believe whatever he can find out, the con- If YOU earn wages or salary by sweat flict between science and religion may soon of body or brain, hold your breath a be resolved.” Tn our times, as in Galileo's, official inquiry, inquisition or trial begins with the obsession that somebody is going to make somebody else believe something contrary to what he does believe. No con- vention can decide a bishop's or anybody else’s liberty of belief, for the simple rea- son that belief —thought— cannot be enslaved by official dictum, however it may be regulated or suppressed as to its effect upon human affairs. It is part of human nature that persecution, or even impartial prosecution of beliefs, results in stronger conviction of such beliefs and scorn and distrust of the methods of con- version used. There is much wisdom in the lines, “No rogue e’er felt the halter draw, With kind appreciation of the law.” The cases of Bishop Brown, Teacher will come forth with their liberty of belief unimpaired and, probably, with larger fields in which to exere to exercise it. ACCUSED OF OF BARBING AN FRANCISCO is somewhat seeking and somewhat not seeking what is alleged to be an apostle of the famous Cassie Chadwick, in the person of Mrs. Barbette Hammell. Some high society folks, some jewelers, auto dealers and others are seeking Barbette, but some busi- ness men who wrote letters to her are not on their knees praying that she be speedily found. It seems that Barbette, who is right pretty, according to pictures in the “Doings of Society” page, got a letter of recommendation from a clergyman. Then she borrowed $1,000, in the shape of a check, from a relative of ex-Senator Phe- Tan. On the strength of the check and her acquired social affiliations, Barbette worked the merchants and others until the they’re holding ought to sound some- like $100,000, but doesn’t, according to the accusations. Fake oil wells, wildcat stock and such? Pshaw! Common stuff. Get mere indi- cations of 'way up social eclat and there’ll be dozens of them grabbing at the hook at one time. ‘HERE'S a niee little diplomatic point in it over which Secretary Kellogg is blinking like an opossum after hibernat- ing thru a long winter. seems that Uncle Sam has extra- ‘territorial arrangements and rights in Morocco, and it doesn’t look well, diplo- matically speaking, to have American avi- ators bombing Moroccan men, women and children. Our aviators are formally BETTER LATE THAN NEVER minute, The Los Angeles chamber of commerce has noticed the Mellon hullabaloo about reduction of surtaxes of the rich and it solemnly memorializes congress to pay particular attention to reduction of taxa- tion of “earned incomes,” meaning, largely, wages and salaries, Moreover, said cham- ber asks all other chambers of commerce to take similar action, This paper's space becomes more and more precious as the gladsome season of heavy Christmas advertising draws near, but it will with great cheer list the name and location of any chamber of commerce taking action like that of the Los Angeles chamber. One species of news that this paper glories in is miracles. MUCH IN LITTLE VERY time when called upon to give a " his individual views for the in- ‘colonel Mitchell are very simi- rs : Y eee Pestag the mane ; ke of formation of government and its folks, . lixing for discipline’s sake. All three Herbert Hoover delivers some good hard sense, his latest delivery being upon his appearance before the aircraft commis- sion, On that occasion, in his quiet, self- contained way, ha must have shocked or- ganized capital. Aviation, as a business, is just where railroading was when the promoters of the transcontinental railroads got from congress subsidies which were plain rob- bery of the nation and which have been scandal and fraud for over a half- century, No subsidy for air navigation, says Mr. Hoover, but government “nourishment” in the form of services comparable with those which the government has always given to commercial navigation. There can be little objection to the so- called government “nourishment” in the shape of lighting of airways, charting of the air and inspection of the personnel. In fact, such would be a duty of govern- ment, as in the case of navigation by water. It means merely good government and good business. But, when Secretary Hoover draws the line as he does, he puts worry in the eyes of as greedy a lot of capitalists as those who fattened on gov- ernment “nourishment” in the matter of the transcontinental railroad building. TELLING ABOUT US EATTLE—HER FAULTS; HER VIRTUES,” is the title of a booklet which every citizen should have—and what is more, which everybody outside of Seattle should have. The booklet was originally in the form of letters written to a friend in the East by a “tenderfoot” newspaper woman here. They were so interesting the Chamber of Commerce ob- tained the rights to them, and the new publication is the result. It is something different in the way of advertising the city and tells in a graphic manner how warned. Of course the warning might have come you read it, months ago, when the newspapers were the town impresses the stranger. After send it on to someone who doesn't know all about Seattle. ? ? Answers to Your Questions ? ? @ If a man born in this country |% went back to Austria and enlisted| ‘OU in the Austrian army, serving in} LY any question of fact or In- can get an answer to | ia express | %\ forms and exercises by which abor-| |iginal peoples worahip.| that army all during the world war,| | formation by writing The Seat- mono. the American Indiana the can he still claim American citizen-| | tle Star Question Editor, 1322 | | folem more frequently takes the ship because of his birth in this New York ave, Washington, | | form of an animal, and is carved in} country? } | D. and inclosing 2 cents in | | poles that are erected in their vil A. When he entered the Austrian) | loose stamps for reply. No | |lages, and thus becomes a sacred army he had to take an oath of al-| medical, legal or marital ad- object with them. Totems and legiance to Austria. This auto-| | Vice. Personal replies confi. | | totem poles are used by nearly all! matically released him from hia| | Gentlal. All letters must be | | the primitive peoples of North and American citizenship. In order to| | Sened. 1) South America, Africa and Aus-| become a citizen ho will have to|*™ ~~ ‘H| tralia, and in some of the more take out naturalization papers the! Q. When were the colored Nghts "emote parts ot Ada, same as if he had not been born in this country. on Niagara Falls first displayed? A. May 25, 1925, see eee Q Has Switzerland a navy? S What is a “totem pole”? A. No, except a few guard boats on Lake Lucerne. sae Q. Are the coastal defenses of Irc- land under Great Britain? i A. By treaty with the British gov- ernment, the Irish Free State un-| dertakes its own coastal defense, the defense by the sea of Great Britain! Q In which Inaugural address did | Woodrow Wilson say, “This is not a y of érumph; it is a day of dedi-| The “totem” is a symbol of the | cation” int or family, that t# used in the | As Things Look | To J. R. Justice A. In hia firat inaugural address, ahd Ircland being undertaken by F you have a few 4 of va- HE apple pickers come the imperial forces. cation time left take your from “all over." Cara bear: oi, i % . a in.| family and the family car and es een crete ie is the number of farms in- , regon, Utah, Idaho and Mon eta or decreasing? Pen atime tp eo rne ay aka tana, will be seen parked A. There were 90,000 fewer farmé,| valley. There 1s sunshine for around the labor booking of- or a decrease of one-half of 1 per| everybody over there, and tho fices. ‘The going price is around ‘cont, in the United States last year| mornings and the evenings are 5 cents a box for picking, and filled with the odors of fall, with Just a slight reminder that win- ter comes. The orchards are loaded with the famous big, red jes, and everywhere pickers © busy on the job. QNOWe as compared with 1923, and a re- duction of land in crops of 1,200,000 acres, or one-third of 1 per cent. Of| the decreased crop area, approxim ately 1,000,000 acres were used for| additional pasture. the average’ man or woman will if 100 boxes a day. But those bing to the Yakima valley should bear in mind that sun. shine and apples are more plen. tiful than arg Jobs. HE highway from Seattle to Yakima is excellent, every bit of it, including the former bad streets of Easton, Kittitan has outdone King county in roadmaking on the other wide of the mountain, And from El. lonsburg, the new river high- y Has eliminated that heart. HATEVER your task, it Ip fair that 1 ank, Just how do you handle ing mountain road, It fn it daily? Does toll appear tough? Is the working road rough, road of seenic gram Vor and do you, or don't you, work guily? miles it follows the winding The easiest job can quite easily rob a person of spirit that's proper. | river, tho often hundreds of fect Tho habit of shirk with the every-day work can make a small task | above, The road ts wide and seem a whopper. | tho grade is good, but much When work, piled up high, meets the average man's eye, whenever 4 loose crushed rock makes it he can he'll postpone it, His thought that tomorrow will cut down the sorrow Is wrong, and he well might have known It, . You know you must toil and, ording to Hoyle,” the beat plan {5 merely to do it, When you've drifted behind, you can make up your mind to settle right down and go to it, Tomorrow is wrong ‘causo it’s too far along. and the how. ‘That worry will leave you if you'll Just believe you can do what you ought to do NOW right, 122 The Seattle Sinr) necemary to use care in many plac An outside guard rail along all the high spots would make the drive one of joy, o +4 TODAY ts the when ND do not forget to keep a lookout for the herd of buffaloes that foods along the mountain-side acrons the river, | rTIE SEATTLE STAR TU ee {OUT OUR WAY WES HIS (THET LOOKS VERY MUCH LIME ONE 0’ THEM STIFFY. HE OFFIN Buns | HEART SHAPED Boxes CANOY FER HIS HOSS | O CHOCLITS YOUNG AN-WELL MAYBE THEM | HAS GOT NUNDUH HEART GHAPED BOKES ] ARM, 1 DION | 16 TH SPECIAL Kino HiK KNOW HE WAS IN ANY WIMMIN, ROUND JABBIN THE GREEN EYED MONSTER. BY WILL TAMS) ( On, 1 OONT THink 6C INTRESTID Apples Are One of Best Fruits for Food BY DR. HUGH 8, CUMMING Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service HIE first point to remember regarding the use of fruit tx that in m edible stage does not correspond to the harvest time, particularly when we remember that in order to stand shipment for long dis tances fruit in harvested car lier than should be done, Inthe caso of many fruits it Is nec ensary for & considerable pe riod of time to elapne after these fruits are fl harvested be. fore they can be properly eaton. ‘There are a number of highly important changes that occur tn fruit during the ripening process. These changes materially affect the fruit an an article of diet When unripe fruit Is placed In storage for ripening, one !mpor. tant change which o ris a gradual increase in the afhount of sugar and a corresponding de crease in the amount of starch and acid. Other changes which take place are responsible for the particular flavor or aroma char acteristic of many species Bome kinds of apples, canes the Dr. Cumming for in stance, may be eaten as soon as picked they are “Many other kinds, ter varieties, require a period of storage before they can be used advantageously, Some apples, particularly variety known as Raldwina, us ually picked tn October, are much better eaten In December. Theso changes in ripening frult are highly tmportant, The loss of acidity, the decreane in starch, the increase in the amount of sugar produces the mellowness of ripe apples and renders them edible. For fruit, you should know, may be properly eaten only when it is thoroly ripe. If partially de- cayed fruit {s eaten you are tak ing into the body decidedly un- wholesome material containing organisms which may cause trou- ble. Stewed, baked or raw apples are excellent articles of food, and tn addition they are available in the market practically the year around, Pears form an excellent article of diet, especially for many peo- plo who suffer from intestinal disorders and who are unable to that indulge thelr appetites for sour fruits, Plums and prunes are also wholesome fruits Grapes aro among the most refreshing of fruits, Apricots, A few years ago a Yakima packing firm went into the Da kotas and brought back 60 head of buffalo and turned them loose in the mountain ranges. They come daly along the river to drink, and it gives one a thrill such as the pioneers had, to see this herd browsing on the mountain-sides. eee AYING js well over in the Kittitas valley, and the end of the threshing season is at hand, Tho ranchers all appéar happy and prosperous, and, strange to say, express little complaint concerning the gov- ernor’s action in turning down thelr long-cherished irrigation project, ‘Thoy say he will got over it when he fully under. e@tands the situation, ete Te Bo the ilensburg dha Yakima merchants report a better fall outlook than for the past three years, And if @here jis anyone carry a grouch over that wa he is staying under cover, eee ® HOULD you ha®) a over cold or stiff joint take it across mountains, ‘fen days in Kittitas or Yakima valley a temr the wo and you will lose it and come home ready for a good winter's tight altho high In acidity, are rela tively rich in food value. A j ound © apricota ponsesses esretley Bani ryt a rr ge | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 food value than does a pound of If a0, you must be careful. You go to extremes in all Raisins, that is, dried grapes, things. are not’ as digestible ds other ou should cultivate more men kinds of dried fruite and they | tal balance. may at times cause intectinal To guide you in your decisions. troub You are very sensitive I as are much more nu- | Your health will not stand tridous than are cantaloupes, | h strain grapefruit, lemona, nges or | You have the qualities for lead peaches, but be sure the bananas ership. ou eat are ripe, bi nol decay And people will look to you for Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles, if They Are of Public Interest Mr. Fistt: My father is an Armenian, my mother was an English woman, and I wes born | run at large and trespass on the nelghbora Call the police department, MAin-7810. in England in 1906, We came to America in 1920, and four | One ne. years later I married an Ameri- Mr. Fiztt: I would like to can citizen, Am I an American see @ corporation tex return cttisen, and can I vote here? Nat, Where do I go to seo 4? MRS, J. K. C | pon Since you were married later 2 thhn 1922, you are not an Write to Burns Poe, collector, American citizen, but would be | Tacoma, Wash. If the lists classed by this country ns an | bave not been closed he will Armenian. It will not be nec- give you the desired tnforma- essary for you to take out first ton papers, however, but will be e159 necensary for you to be natural- Mec Wislt) What. le the ized J. Speed Smith In the freight rate on household goods postoffice bullding. from Seattle to New York? . Would it ba cheaper for us to Mr. Fixit: On Washington acll or ship our furniture back at, between Fifth and Sixth 10. New .York?.. We expect to aves. there are numerous wom- return to Keattle in a year or en that call to men that poss Sena MRS. R. by from the doors and windows. As I have to park my car in that locality daily, 1 wish this could be stopped. Have called tho attention of the police to the matter, but get no resulta. Will you please have it stopped? JANE Ht Your letter has been sent to tho chief of police, and he will give the matter attention. it further troubled, call the chief, MAin-7810, and talk to him about the condition you com~- plain of. ed Mr. Fixit: What can be done with the chickens of a neigh- bor who habitually turns them loose to run all over my place? SUBSCRIBER. Chickens are not permitted to The freight rate on household furniture to New York !s $5.55 on less than carload lotx You could probably ship your effects for less than you would loss on a sale, Seo a storage ware- house. You might be able to store them cheaper, oa s Wants to know: E. M. Elli Wapato, Wash., would like the address of the manufacturer of a small gaso- Hine torch that uses compressed air, Tho torch Is fed thru a fruit Jar, Mra. Joe Vaught, 710 N. Third st, Yakima, would like the ad- dress of a woolen mill in Seat- tle that cards wool into bats for quilts, 10 | Third Generation is Using Syrup Pepsin No Other Laxative Can Replace Dr. Caldwell’s in the Confidence of Those Who Use It "[ SERB are thousands of healthy, robust young men and women who have never in all their lives taken any other laxative for constipation than Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Their parents were given it by their par- ents; the grandpar- ents aro using it today. Itis the one Inxative ideally suit- ed to all the family, anfo for the littleones, effective in grown- ups, #0 compounded that elderly people who are constantly forced to take n laxative because the intestinal muscles are weakening, find increased dosage unnecessary. This wonderful constipation remedy has been used continuously for thirty years, and over ten million bottles are now sold annually, the largest selling family laxative in the world! ‘The cost averages but a cent a dose, Every drugkist sells it, and under a guaranteo to do na claimed or your money will be refunded. nme If You Want to Try It Free Before Buying Millions of carefully conducted homes are never without a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Mrs, N. J. MeIntyre of Hagan, Tenn., re~ lies on it to keep her children in health and Mrs. G. C. Wimberly of Jetmore, Kan., says she tises it with most satisfactory results both for her- self and children. There is scarcely a day that someone in a family does not need it for constipation, flatulency, auto-intoxication, biliousness, intes- tinal poisoning, headaches, colic and cramps, and to break up fevers’and colds. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a tolentifically balanced compound of Vgyptian senna with pepsin and econ aromatics, Tho formula is on the pacl ety tho pularity of this tatural'y table faeaivert Jncreases, the publ 0 dis~ cards the harsher physics like calo- mel, coal tar in candy form, salt wators and powders. Dr, Caldwell’a Syrup Pepsin empties the bowels more cleanly and without any danger, “Syrup Pepsin," 525 Washington St., Monticello, Minols. I need a good laxati nd qwould like to prove what say about Dr Cald> well's Syrup Pepsin by actual teat. Send me a free trial bottle, Address to Name... Address Not more than one free trial bottle to.» family, | | | } l sDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1925 , S. Lags; Pacific Fleet Is Navy Without a Home By Maz Stern Sterm telling shout « dent should be familiar ee each FRANCISCO, Sept. 29.—A na without a home! This is the condition on the Pacific coast, where Uncle Sam has sent the bulk of his sea forces and failed to provide a suitable naval base. Three-fourths of the United States n cated on the Pacific coast, and yet here fourth of the naval base facilities on th board! This month the fleet will return from its 14,000-mile cruise. On the 2,000 miles of coast it is under contract to defend is only one haven w ith deep water and facili ties to refit and repair the “big boys” of the navy This is Bremerton navy yard, in Puget Sound, to the extreme north of the At San Francisco bz Ex-Secretary the Alameda b department. The Denby, in long coast line, y the naval authorities been asking for a deep-water na have long al base, e the 1923, building of & 2 as one of the official policies of hi nay rd at Mare Is rl at one time. With onl: one nd on Carquinez Straits, in t the x nh of the coast, s harbor, is no sense @ the nesrest fl dry- val base Sullt in 1854, and Pearl Harbor hout ronting on a shallow, muddy © for channel, 4 ong ago failed feet any » itious m heavy handicaps mile and a half v ni fathoms Fatal Folly Not to Defend West Const Lack const shy of short on the name and falling | defense ¢ mobile 1 men, 1 alr worth from seven to ten the job of backing up the Pa where not more than 12 lar cific fleet with a ‘al base, ships can anchor | demanded by every naval ex The currents are strong and | pert, the United States stands the winds make it dang accused by those who ought to for small ¢ Im: | know, of almost fatal folly temptin neuver Short of absolute disarmament, sha fleet these minimum defenses, the ex- active basis, with perts urge, are required as the scouts, cruisers, dest nplest of precautions. marines, tenders, 1 “The nation is baring {ts ply ships, repair | breast to the Far East,” said riers ond mine sweepers, num. | one officer. “We have never ber as it would in wartime from 400 to 700 ships! San Francisco Unable to Accommodate Ships Mure Inland can céfre for the foresworn the right of defending our borders, and by spending the millions we are spending we are reasserting that right. Why not make it efficient defense in great battleships only in time of | stead of such defense as invites high tide, These draw 23 f ugeression, defense that is a and if damaged would ptobably genture, but that is not the sub- draw 40 feet, The channel is stance?” not deep enough to Mare Isl } i ans yards to accommodate a woun ed battleship, Hence San Fran clsco is utterly helpless to give | 77 SCIENCE I MEDICAL SCHOOLS vn ald to the nificent fleet |X that Uncle Sam has sent to | MERICAN MEDICAL AS- this coast SOCIATION has issued its Even should the navy con- annual report on medica] educa- quer congress and politics, tion In the United States. ‘ It Pacific coast with two bases shows a great change in con- would still be far behind the At- ditions in recent years. Twenty lantic const. At Portsmouth, years ago there were twice as Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Norfolk and Charleston are re- pair yards capable of caring for at least one division of the fleet ——— SMOKING ROOM STORIES many medical schools as there are today. These ranged from real schools down to mere “di- ploma mills.” Doctors were turned out rapidly, and the United States had more medical schools than all other countries com. bined. Most of these schools 4| were privately owned end were operated for profit! One of 667T was the honeymoon trip these institutions in one year for Mr. and Mrs, Mul- graduated a hundred pupils rooney,” said a smoker, “and without their having had any they were stopping at a hotel for the first time in their lives. As they wee leaving to resume their journey, they saw a notice on the door of thelr room read- ing, ‘Stop! Have you left any- thing? and they got busy. “Ten minutes later the clerk at the office got this by room phone: y, mister, we've packed the soap, towels, writin’ paper, pens and ink, piller slips and laboratory work and without thelr having seen a single pa- tient in dispensary or hospital, The Council on Medical Edu- cation was formed in 1904, and it has greatly reduced the num ber of medical colleges, at the same time raising the stand. ards. Laboratory and hospital facilities have been increased, and only well-equipped teachers engaged. Today 96 per cent. of medical colleges rank as Class A institutions, as against 6 per sheets, but be heavens! we've | cent 20 years ago. got to lave the mattresses! * Full of Goodness "SALADA” TEA is piire—delitious “ahaicicue. Ask your grocer fora package. Black, Green or Mixed Blends. R. & H, C. COOK, MAin-0669, DISTRIBUTORS } qj) Guaranteed Dentistry At Less Than HALF PRICE! For just a little longer, we offer all Dental work at One-Half or less the regular prices. Note these: $8 Crown and Bridge Work Now $4.00 And like all dur Dental Work Guaranteed for 15 Years! These startling reductions are made to induce you to come in and see what excellent dental work we do at prices far below the regular rates. edema Niky and personal service. our Hasy Payment Plan, * PIONEER DENTISTS Collins Building, Second and James St. Telophono MAin.2736 Dr, H. 0. Danford, Manager Let us explain

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