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MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 192 THE SEA’ ‘ag no — _ - ~ — - or - LY ciaiaaia aaetieah . ) | ‘The Seattle: Star |= ca | (Moa a at deen Things Look | To J. R. Justice | Newspaper Be terp wre eevee, | steer tt Mente her wo | Phone tate | | RACIOUS' FER GOSH SAKES - ‘ in t ais "we sa en at \s $200 5 | B TERRIBLE} \L/ wat TAIN’ NO KIO A aking @ bre " year gn00) B ? a | ALS RUNG OUT LIKE / “ food of 5 ty _ — ——— _ — . = . (ele 2 that is going nomewhe STAI §F . Arr . in : 'S TINKN ; re “~— _| “TAKE HOLD of sour ‘ j ch: cant aes \ tter of breakfast SIFTING THE SENSE THE LORD'S UNKNOWN 2) AT KINDA STUFF! ‘ Jo eae re mt Ure 1 GF 2 OTHERS HE president’s aircraft inquiry is get- s ML, bik: R t oon. F HOLD Ni HANS: GOOD i P ' e ke ‘ ting along . A NOBODY in overalls; a ditch-digger \ GOSS OYA» WANT may be found on the min Plenty of witnesses and just as many f at $3 or $4 per day: just ov PEEPUL TTHINK IM ste book of some recent gath- ; < We ering Opinions on how to run the national de- | Sy ; family, none; home, A SISSIE. ER CANT i, It ig the sense of this meet- fense. What one says the next one ing house; fric wantir Amer TAKE. CARE A MYSELF? ie ee ee and deni ed only to the extent of understand —_—— | 1 te our business, and , » 1 } t} ‘oa But don’t be discouraged. All this i ng orders, supplemented with a cur | erations rfectly natural. Ask 100 railway men now and then : jow to run a railroad, or 100 women how No thunder of gun no cheers of ier: chine | tapianaasee El rom to bake a cake, and you will get, i her charging columns; no flag at the head o it Oe cries agi hard-headed of British case, just about 100 different answers a troop; no vision of glory acclaimed b plea to Great Britain have nee ta one o Z 7 i e@ nO prospect of ¢ arble slab pr nm Beatle this week. gave each ¢ 6 Nanian The fundamentals of railroading or | the world; no prospect of a marbl ; lat - , ae on ue As tried @ stiff sentence eake-baking, however, are well known. So | to commemorate the deed. One of the of the 1,000,000 boxes that are a shes, but is all c are the fundamentals of national defense. | Lord's “unknown ; a pcheduled to go to England for pase out the same treatment to e Thus when it comes to listening to the | , Francisco Amoya leaps into a gas-filled distribution “throgws, Zarops ledex dastoar ke one of jous sche for racti any of trench, in San Francisco, and dic But, Chis spells prosperity for the ks dangerously Ii 0 f merous schemes ior practicing any ‘ first, he sav the liv of two fellow pple growers of th ato and the robbers, these arts, plain common sense must rule. Irs' Ree SAVOS Uns ee ot fa eli tchepdt lapes Ftceg o eat a : A few years ago, with the gyroscope, a workmen. They were his brother men Lote yer rt, sings po con Eechedatics dae ores man came forward with a mono-rail rail- | He dd not hestitate. He gave his hll to- me danger of it putting the worked radio cps it ould Way which,-it was ctaimed, would com- ward the Broth rhood of Mar He could British doctors all on ° . suszest ee 2 pletely revolutionize railroading and re- | Not teach all men, he could not lift men Be Brown and George H. Cotter duce transportation costs to a minimum, | from sin by lifelong suffering, as did the i Ass ga hat they setiie tuetr Gemecrat But our hard-headed railway magnates | Nazarene, the carpenter on. But, he 1D “aayn nearer New York city | boys of 40 did not scarp their two-rail lines because did his bit. He gave his all, He “car because of the new airline mail | ‘choose uz of the discovery. Common sense told them ried on the great lesson of the Christ to bo established out of Pasco to wait until the one-rail idea had become Greater love hath no teh d gger, oF to connect, “wit the. air sa dependable before they threw away some- king, than he who giveth his life for hi 1 Pen ed is lee vera thing already proved. | fellow man. ee nour make by allratl taltice We must stick to the fundamentals of It is a fine item to put into the grea | With a fast train out «| ue it wil ake lem han Mational defense in just the same way. mass of crime news. Today we are hearing a lot about floting Chicago reformers are going to fight sin with pub ; | ah Navies being obsolete. Some so-called ex- Hic singing, Worth trying. If Chic singing WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY- | a ] ft perts are advocating scrapping ours, de- doesn't soothe the savage breast, it may drive it else THE. DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. Mr. axat 6) ze ar i e fact that not one great power on where, d er Sp “t ‘of fi d with —s — - | Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles, if They earth has done anything of the kind with a Seite - mga oe 0) ae Re ee theirs nor have we heard of any such RAISING BABIES BY BOOK : AEs rf Are of Public Intere country contemplating such a move. | OLOMON was a failure as a parent. t kk : tates of Nobility o wr) : Sn anarial air ard seems es e s ds & 4 lowr TH Mr. Firit: Why are soma | that you would he were she The president’s special air board seems He spank d hi kid ; and laid ‘ m : ‘ . hit, Tutt WAY, are some | that you would be were’ sie to have plenty of common sense, They the rule for future fa her s: “Spare the Bi roble m for Britain eitlieas sivas $0 teers ee Hie ra Se Reads ing to need it before they are thru rod and spoil the child. / ) ee usauin whalfie afte Be witinttea ‘t¥ten Why net are going to y | 4 : t parking ‘ sifting the sense from the nonsense. ; But Mrs. Sidonie Matsner Gruenberg, | By Eugene MacLean S net 6 tap tf we fall to obsy the make another effort to get her Still, there is really nothing difficult | of the Child Study association, says Y iawn sBeneca at benween | back home? about determining the kind of national spanking a child is “confessing your fail- | I ONDON, t. 19. . 1 comes . curs almost dally. One dig ma- | Mr, Fistt: Wl you advise defense we need. It must, of course, be | ure as a parent | 34. later England @ to Hoay chine stands parked all day and | me where the headquarters of well balanced and capable ‘of functioning | Mrs. Gruenberg makes allowa for |} @ moth ut he : “pe MONDAY, OCTOBER 19 seems to have no trouble, the W. 0. W. are tn Beattler I ‘on land or sea, or in the air or under the ; Solomon, however. He had so many | ‘ a Shas eg Bock. el rede fs If #0, you are determined TILEN have reoenily __come para: an i ‘Water anywhere at any time regardless of | wives and so many kids around the place ten’t s ethii sereing or valcs And with your high ambi rt this nur aber 0 the | ache to transfer my same wind or weather. | that it “would be too fnuch to expect except for “shoot complicates the coal a You w ee ee | | and eaxent ietvell: be tented | | Canin. yeetse6 tunel ebtions tea Which means that we need aircraft and | such a father to use persuasion inst Kiran E already bad enough ta E our eeae | alle, | ths meskean® “hatter cvaeue ) plenty of the best, a bang-up army cap- of the rod.” Solomon, Mrs. Gruer aeaqarslg re ‘a | © eos ca bacly cot And leas aenaitive ves ae MAin-0970. Camp No. 286 may § able of rapid expansion and a navy of the thinks, didn’t know the names o | eer h: netcane & as | vl BLY On Yon ike SC aN ant itt Argh Noe vat sin be reached by calling MAin- ; kind approved by the best minds of the children and possibly didn't | sap, peg eee WHAT DENMARK ment a a K sed esau veag eared (MI MERE. most powerful sea-faring nations the were his and which were the neighbor el t which erwino 1 ACCOMPLISHED pT nate iu a ne has Just put in new potes | PR fost HAHN sh world over. If Solomon, Jr., broke son of the royal a bona are Ssitin’ wibaak and sciring, but no Hants have | - a \gteperty otimory tw! thetoag = —— dishes, he shouldn't have been spanked, Phan: wrovikiictekbe Tait saree yo Sole nd my Mouse. cg | walks in front of hls howe? : Prof. L. C. Donnelly, of Detroit, says we will some | Mrs, Gruenberg argues. He should have | P jaigar double Sock, and my hove, Tower 1tchiacon te eu weak . | day be fed with ultra-violet rays, but must be naked | eine he ning "he could’ | sai “7 is iw HAT FOLKS SAY weil as that of a neighbor, has Sehiod den the pldeoatie fuer ; Mile eating. 0 bilsst when s fellow can sit ina | Deen supplied with something he coulc me toner? kane ugh | | deen durglarieed. We want | ove ve rink and for t : Sag S break. own food; they know that Nght. Can wou haa? } heir : ‘bathtub and get a meal by turning on a faucet or rear, jn od in ag : i a4 scooters. They have been asked . Gecsething: Doubtless Mrs. Gruenberg and the ahlackn tA Spahr obioaAie ihe azewer ta that Denmark | _ CIEUT RAY xacmngow, OE oe oyesipe eae! ed map ra ‘ righ But aad Sma, 9 Gomeely” | : r ; | aviation engineer: “A fow years Lights oa new lines must be | 50 Soe ile oy Wher can other modern parents are right. Bu as Britain, and sooner | has cut her land into gmail in- | @g0 the man who drove an | ordered putin by the city coun. | Sieeh but refuses PROGRESS there are mighty darn few of the present they'll do somet | grown rich thru e reversal of | ‘utomoblle was considered a | cil before the Nehting depart | yee . r i generation who haven't been turned up- ont own accc Akal operas preg ot daredevil; now everybody drives ment can do po. Seo your coun- MRE. EB, . ‘ EVENTY-FIVE years ago the Chi- ean lawns anil’ aonndly .warmedscend ‘{¢ ernment doesn't, Laden ve ah ee eee ee, one. Inn few years more, alr. | climan and urge him to have | There ts an ordinance prohib- 4 Plane flying will mon as auto drivi the order made if it has not yet been done, iting children making unneces- sary noise on the sidewalks, but be aa com- cago, Burlington & Quincy railroad Was started, according to the Seattle of- didn’t seem to hurt them very much. At least it didn’t hurt them so much that it Denmark has enough food to export in great quantities; Png- jous thing about It ts a tee it ts not rigidly enforced, on sia fices of the road. } sale are t the barons, br land can't raise enough to au Mr. Felt: 1 hav Aopted ¢ theory that will be . . : s ecome necessary to carry on a na- arons, row ~ SGy fr. ave an adop' the theory at “boys ___ In 1850 it began with 12 miles of track pas pes aide and have a. tiaHodal quises, dukes and xc herself MAJ. ¥. J. ATIKINBON pirl who left home at the age | boys” Explain to the leaders j in Illinois. Now the Burlington owns lonal propa Bal ‘ oak d fe ¥ nites land sltuat phe chemical officer: “Nn of 18 against my wishes. She that they are troubling you, and i ry 2 4 spa ‘ aS of wages, inut lo te now 19, Would eresponsi- | pass out a bag of apples wit! 4 id controls 11,500 miles. In 1850 there conference to end spanking. ¢ or one minute can’ we allow 9. Would Ib Pi bag of apples with geal saps ata ! ‘ ——— _ yment, and of inept in | ome foreign nation to monopo- | ble for unpaid bills that she | the explanation. If that does i were only 9,000 miles of track in the en- | Anyway, our esteemed secretary of th navy Is Pps prin mngiand, | Pleatarabin: areca, ooh liza the chemt ahi? Sethe adapabeey ; ie eeiics geacaryar erp eh ape : i es. | proving that ho is perfectly satisfjed with himself s “the Dukeries,”" in a | to a hend together y ‘monopolized You are under the same | the police, and that ts always ni in England | ere the lind Ia rich | Today the Burlington serves #1 states. and the status quo, moral and’ Snape) etligationa a i ndling youngsters —-— | ery clase to London the only When the road was founded there was | | very clase to London, ty | The wor my al ieee ES only 130 miles of rail in those states. Now ; MAY BE S( NiO) € led by one after another cure is octallam: some of them there are 79,000. Then the population of N applicant for naturalization at seine aeees Ficscot pgprhacrm pap aA Oe those states was 2,000,000. Now it is Grand Rapids, Mich., was rejected the leaurely strotis of the titled eure tsk teen (bands te ee 23,000,000. because in answer to questions as to the owners Gown thie: workers duties of the vice president, he replied: “The vice president? Why, he don’t do Almost any American, look- ing over tho field, would say With the development of the railroad, population has grown. With the growth of population the railroad has been able nothing.” tet (be gue le dt wank ; ‘to develop. Apparently the late Tom Marshall anak couldn’t have been vice president if he had had to pass a naturalization exam- ination. Each has been dependent on the other in the past. It will still be in the future. That’s the way progress is made. | Letters 20" Readers 2 2 Answers to Your Questions 2 ? | All Lettera to The Star Must Have Name and Address — Jand visitors were in the city at that time. The New Automatic tor Tho Star: The execu. tive committee of the Ant!-Saloon Laague of Washington re ed that I write you a hearty en ar for an ed} youth of our country. The Ren- ton tragedy, as a result primarily of beer and booze, four young people, two of whom were girls Q When was the speech of Woodrow Wilson, in which he used} | ‘OU can any question of fact or In- Sad s get an answer to medical, legal or marital ad- | | 2°07! ; @. Is King George of England al | yee personal replies conti- | |* psf and shite background with erage | | dential. All letters must be Tas Ae lc pe er, The} A. Yes. {| Star of nado up of two ee signed. =a cauitaterat trlangtes tn symmetricat| far can a white letter,| intersection A ‘age a on a darkgbackground, | who worked in black metal or tron,| eae ibe. ‘cdg a3 distinguished from a whltermith| @. Should m rose bush that ha "A Tt should be clearly perceived | tho worked in white metal or tin! bloomed well all summes vad eo ce of | ee |p in the fall? By the normal eyo at a distance of ? Se ; prur (oer 1 A, Q From what does the pecullar i flavor present in Scotch whisky| 6 Zane Grey is a man, Has any estimate been pagoeraly either tn the asprin ic... NATURELAND = made | e have a flag which consists of @ or fall, | é ‘A. From, the smoke. of the peat|a* to the number of Shriners who! that is burned in the process of pene te Ww Lhe i C,, dur Ye coyoto of the Wont tq as |the Shrine convention last summ : ae 1 ont s j ene riers | A. Approximately 150,000 Shriner uld by hunters té be more y than the fox himse’ Q. When fs the word “great” used | Can..be tamed fhe ra watt ie [fa describing relationship ax in tt A THOUGHT —= || tentach tound a coyote tap qword “great niece” or “great uncle event Sac Son | i A. It applies to relations who are | “7 | Towne die’ fade i in a don, tn | gemoved by three generations. | I will put my laws Into their | one which wa x it home to his eee | hearts and in their minds will | fh Vion te eumng Kittens Q What is tho origin of the name, I write them—Hebrews 10:16, | SP° licked the tiny wolf, looked SS placksmith’’? | ‘ at him a moment and there. i A. The name “blacksmith” origin do not flour-. babes i. unted for him and fed ated Because the man was a smith Caesar, him until tie could food himseit, tate hs = ~ This bring-up mado him a pet till the neighbors began to: chickens. About that time, he disappeared | a i You are ‘allowed to kill one buck deer during the open sea son tn Pennsylvania, But jp ; you are even neon carrying a 3 re rifle after that, they'll plank 4 OMETHING goes wrong In this country of ours: n scandal, a blunder | Tne aren ante they'll plank a fy or such, It reaches the ears of the higher-up powers and, suddenly, PI | i someone's in Dutch. p = ‘The great common people are listeners in, no matter whatever {t ta. Nominee-for-mayor Waterman ‘And, somehow or other, we all get a grin out of hearin’ there'll soon says that the Hylan adminintra. be a quizz, ‘ tlon’a rat-catching cost Now : The probers are named. Ah, they'll trail the thing down and fina York $72 per rat and tho flew out who's really to blame, They'll take up the quizz and they Il do tt catching $77 per flea, such up brown. They dream of their chances for fame rates would pauperize any Pa They'll sit in m session and chat for a week. They may get some cific Coast elty in two days, place, but I doubt it. They'll Issuqgreports that will prove, so to apeak, |® -—— { that they don’t know a dern thing about tt U. 8, labor, dopartment ro 4 ‘The sessions drag on till they slowly die out, and the thrill of this ports@hat the average woman Quizz has departed. We simply forget what the probe wan about— spends $63.66 on clothes, where *eause another, by this time, has started. the average man spendg $71.98, 1 We'll always have scandal and some sort of blunder, and quizzes | It's none of the labo®dopart galore in our cup, And always we'll Wonder just when in the thunder mont’s business and, besides, they'll really clear one of them up. look at tho Clothes @ woman mat | (Copyright, 1926, for ‘The Seattle Star), doesn't wearl j A i "an a etalon oi aio as They further authorize mo to that they endorse the att! tude taken by Prosecuting Attor- ney Colvin toward a campaign against all forces that are de- bauching our youth! Wo wish further to say that nover In the history there been such an effort pressed in an effective campa by the combined forces of ev including the outlawed liquor traf. to debauch and destroy the say of our government has ox $0 1ENC Bb [ ARTIFICIAL HE production of life from fnorganic materials Was greatly interested acient from earliest times. Prof. A. L. Hors rera, well-known Italian scien tist, probably has come closer to it than anyono 'The theory upon which such experiments are based begins with tho fdea that, at one time, there no life #pon the earth and that Ife came about thra tho action of lght tho mixtures of inorganic stances, With the accep of this theory, a asctentist reasonably may attack the prob- lem of furnishing the condi. tions for producing life. All life tm composed of cella, Professor Herrera has succeed. ed in producing cell-like struc~ tures. ‘This condition easily could have prevailed during the lo epoch, when ultra-vlo- t was abundant. Ifforts to éndow the cella with life by tho addition of fron, magnetism and other salts are In progr According ta® the work of Prof, Jacauon Toop, life, if pros was upon duced artificially,” can be en dowed with reproduction, Pro fessor Loeb is generally ered ited with making successful ex. periments along this line, He made remarkable discoveries, but nover artificially produced life. 5 | hittin testi sicisadl; | Editor The Star: I have read with Interest your stand on the city manager plan, and the rap- {d transit system. But what is belng accom- plished in the way of rapid tran- nit for automobiles, At the present rate of increase, in five could get any place quicker by walking than by run- ning into all tho bottlenecks of tha city's traMo systm. Such places as Fourth and Jackson, Fremont bridge and Westlake and Fourth intersections must bo relloved of somo of the tram that comes there because there ie no other exit 8. E years wo JOHNSON. SMOKING ROOM STORIES _ $$ $$ “é7'M just on my way homo from the football game,” sald a smoker, with a sad look in his eyes, “For daya my boy Joo has been writing that he was sure to make his college team, as sub. if not as regular. Suro enough, there was Joo all sweaty in full ball togs when the famo opened, with both our hoarts yearning for a him, Not tho slightest pros- pects for Joo in tho threo.quar- t but at opening of the fourth, our full-back was Inid out cold, afd Joo rose from his bench, got his head-plece on and was rubbing his hands in eagerness, when the captain yolled ‘ “Hey, Joo! Tustie oft ‘your pants! ‘Tho fullback's \tated his!" “No, I haven't let I was at the game," Joo know Ono sad thing about old age fe that you die without seoing yhat (ho coming *keneration is ing to dance the Charleston in, or not In ELECTRIC RANGE The Famous Low Cost Range Full-Automatic Time and Tem- perature Control. 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