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Show THE EVENING HERALD, TULTlSDAY. JUNE - PACE TWO 11." 1923. Hi TIT.IELY EDITORIALS NEWS FEATURES PRESS COMMENT WASHINGTON NEWS PRUWIM THE EVENING HERALD "EVOLUTION An Independent Newspaper, r.tablisbed weekly to 1858; as a daily la 1822? issued every adttto Teuicg except Batnrday, and Sunday asornlnf; rural morning very morning except Monday. . PuMithed In tie Herald building... W Bonta Tint Weat ttnat. Provo. Utah. Entered as second class matter at the nostoffle In Prota, Utah. ' .. TERMS Or SUBSCRIPTION, month Delivered by carrier, per "VTm Delivered by carrier, per year, U advance....... rn- - hw mail in Utah conntT. tMNF vear.ln advance. ?. . i I n-riivonui h null in United states, outside Utah county, periS-oy-yean ! in advance - CASE iS BUSY ,....;.... 0 ..... Win. H. Eornibrook . , N. Gunnar Rasmusoa ..... t wfvl VV United Preaa News Service and K. B. Member 8erYtee. A- - pet la Ctah south of Bait Like City t large etr eolation of any newspaper In t'tab outside Bait Lake City and Of deft Only dally new (pa V BndnMa iVflf. Telephone "... Editorial Rooms, Telephone ...f. 10T Old and New Standards 1 f Country School - ,' . J Teacher Basks IB Sunligni or o and Publicity .; ' : schools...:';; r l g SEW TOBK, June After wbat prulwbly have been Hue fix bnaieat day of hla life, John TUiimaa Scopes, tbe country achool trarher whn baa monopolized.- - tbe of the naUon'a ne a-front TMOent. ulana to leave tonight for Dayton, Teniu. hot bed of the evo In wnlch he M lution eontro-erg- y the principal figure. . Bexine" fire daya In the metropolis hare been crammed full of conference and during his brief stay 4ere the now famous teacher baa talked with more noted men tban he womicI hare aecn In 100 years la his home towii. With the enlistment of the er-Tlcea of tlarrtNT iarrow, Dudley Field Malone. Jtliilrl(lse Colliy and others representing 'ue of the ha' tion's finest tajent, plans for Bcopea dofenws are virtually com plete.. Today will be upent In brief conference with hia Rnpnortem, af ter which, with Jr. John E. NeaT, his senior counsel, Bcopea wlU start back to Dayton. , In ouUininB the case, Darrow said there were two main lwifpe. In volved. "The first la whether evo lution Is contrary to the teaching of Gort aa contained ia the BlhW be Mid. "Mr. Bryan bell uvea It Is. I do not I. find nothing In evolutiou contrary to the Bible and hare been an evolutionist for fifty years. "The Bccond Issue, which Is even more- - Important, but which .will come afterwards is whether a state has 'a right to prescribe education t'JA 10.--(r- P) rV tw-- .l ...! rr Sen Ice Writer The presides WASHINGTON it referred to as a manKiuer. i n vice 'presidency generally is considered something of a sinecure. It seems . to have occurred to .rntvrriv that, with Thomaa It. '&'iiraVialti ..Aflfk thA MHntni has left aa many living as presidents that Is to one of Chief each, reapectlvely say. Justice Taft and President - anti-foreig- - ' , Cool-iCji- . This gives rise to the guess, either that the vie presidency .must be more wearing than was popularly supposed, or that some deadly quality other than the work (involved lurks in both the chief i magistracy and its understudy's ' .i . 'PoSt. " The facrBTthough we have bad what we called young presidents jand vice presidents, they were young only for the high- - offices they held. After a term or two, moat of them were pretty well on In this life and not far from the getting off place into the next, it . l :; 4 PROLONGED boycott would worse. Foreign Shanghai A!depend , absolutely nese labor, indvstrial smd domestic, common slid Skilled. marrtuJ and clerical. Equally It depends on the "hinterland" for supplies. Cut pit. it would bs paralysed. Japai) experienced a Chinees boy. eott a few years aga There wm ' ,;V P dispute. "We can tick you warned the True,,, the ' Chinese" Japanese. agreed. "We won't light. " Neither will we trade, with you. Nor would theyr Japan forced, some small transactions on a few communities, but they amounted to nothing.- Her trade fallen flat, Japan had to make terms. - . PRESIDENT oris of tile most i popular statesman JWBhtag-- , ton ever has known. . He never took himself' too seriously,' Afta-'ti- e and easy of approach, his clr-- t ! of friends- - was enormous. i His humor antiseptic but heal-inwas delightful. His remark during the postwar reconstruction ' period, with everybody Helling what the eotm-tr- y needed, "It needs a good 'tigar," was 4ypical of him. Frivolous, as it fell on 4b ear, it was packed with meaning' on analysis, a meaning the man in " .' . i'.he street could understand. v." Marshall wasn't the type of poll, ''cian to wait until he knew '"how t!ie wind blew" before making up ;his mind. He made It up In advance and regardless of the wind, and revealed H with a frankrtfis ,'vhich horrified his party'' more 'cautiously Inclined. He never. this ,ht)it. He never tried. ' SHAtt' ''was - g at torelgiv GHINESB resentment in the "treaty like" ports," Bhanghat, la naf drat. On Chinese soil the foreign' ers have their own cities, tinder their own governments; their own courts and their own tews, under Which Chines are punished often Unjustly, they consider. ' In their own country the Chinese are treated or as an Inferior . people. Resisting - hv human commercial exploitation, aa h this most recent Instance, they are shot down in their own streets by foreign policemen. "Bolsherlkl!" cries the Shanghai foreign press. No wonder the Chi' ' nese don't like It ! - broke-hlmseU- -M More than half the destructive in America are of foreign nOT counting reformers. pesw f. f AnU may live as long as 19 yeara rr,ln - r - , "'... tf ther dodee Dicnics. The oldest clock In' England was in 1S25, so now it tt considered t real old timer. Juilt . l1iJi1t0"Vm,t r" e....v r .. " ta. ' - fs" :. J? L.Mla I - rA" TOtEKA i m01S V I v KANSAS cni , ir parsons. MluurN.wjvw: .WICHITaI HUTCHINSON . y MUSKOGEE lAMARH-- O ;"fcRxomkEw Mexico WlCMITA "ALLS ' o. 5 'CL fASO ?.asvso' , UALUur -7 FORT WORTH .. I " M ' TEXAS' , HOUSTON kSAN ANTON W, h T BBS Qismhui Jwwmjoy inese moneer Dwmms or me ractnc lit: .Seventy-fiv- e years agrj th'e.pioneer coffee and spice mill of the PacificGoast was established in San Francisco by James A-- Folge'r. It was a modest plant, for in those, days most housewives bought green colfee and roasted it them selves. But James A. Folger was a far sighted pioneer; He quickly sensed that , v high quality coffee roasted evenly and uniformly in commercial quantities .would have air instant appeal to the Western housewife. He was right.. ' ' ' ;The business expanded rapidly. It grew, with the country. The plant at San Francisco was constantly increased to meet the demand for Folger's products from the; Coast States. Then, in 900, Folger's Coffee was introduced in the Middle-Wee and first Pacific Coast Coffee to be,sold East V 4' ; , - South-West-M- st might accept such g position himself In Michigan he objected that he did hot haves ufflclent knowledge; did not have sufficient knowledge; from Denmark for Its forest conservation, which indicated the importance of the' matter. .' ' Curwood believe, in conserving not only trees, but wild life as well. When he goes Into' the woods - ho dors not kill-fo- r sporf, but for Decease ry food only. As a novelist Curwood has described for his readers the splendor of the stars, the woods, the waters and the vast solitude-sdescribed them for many who look at the sky chiefly to decipher the message written there by aviators g Btnoke ads: gift of Curwood, dem- enstrs ted with great felicity in his book "The Hunted Woman." Is to combine the virile and the tender I to paint from, nature for the background of his romantic talcs. The rugged North Woods is the stage of Curwood's stories. This' author's power for dramatic creation Is re lated la the William Fox screen ef The- - Hunted Wi'un." whfeh-wH- f be shown at Iho Coldm- hia for two days starting Frlday. ' ' : vpltheRockies:i So today in our Diamond Jubilee year it requires three complete plants and , . distributing stations to supply Folger's products to the retail trade 29 in states , the first package of ; Folger's roasted coffee was printed this slogan: tJOn "Our Success is Dependent upon Quality.", On such a foundation has the Folger business rown, to its Diamond Jubilee yean Quality has carried through these seventy-fiv- e years and must always be in the product before it thirty-tw- o " -- . . -- , isgivenaroiger i Jaoei. lhat is our assurance to the hundreds of thousands of loyal Folger tomers. cus- - . San Fraocko " Kansas Dallaa Gty Shldzuoka, japan ' 1 ver-sio- ni The Evening Herald Classified Ads Are Business ?; Get tiers'. 4. GOLDEI GATE; 0M,-k.r.r- cook is threatening to leave." "Miife Bcldoio gives me that much notice.",,, ..;,. . "M Central Number please. mind; central, I wanted the fire department, but the housej has, burned down now." , "Never- V? 2tV- OFFICE CAT - Ca ... mSBSM -- IM-SHGES -- El wb,tch s, suppose they are; how did Gilda Grey earns $4,000 a week. it is said and without moving a . hand.. , itevisea ;aition: No man 13 a hfto to his bootlegger.. Just a sap ' A stitch in, time saves embarrass- Neither a reputation, nor a fence timer who remembered when a bar- ; ;Just because a mnn 'acts, (jneer, , , . , coat-o- f nieui. a 'Whitehead is Kollow by be can strengthened' rel- Jnmper was a headliner In snaps ; be He may that he is demented. . whitewash, soys Alma Straw. . , vaudeville. '' ' 'When a plumler makes a mistake " fermented. " Kaconi JeorgIa, Telegraph, ' he charges twice fyr it ,. how knows landlord Sir, yon are next , These , Barber When: a lawyer makes A "mistake Most every "Even the nir Is not as free as It three ladies came in after you did, used to be" he has a chance to try the case aQ Why. don't yon know In Florida groans a radio fan, well lease rhmyes with fleece. '. ' over again. , All ladies dare the teas . Customer ' them. with Go ahead ',nstatic." 'fwe hare ' a capteater makes a mls I'll wait They are my daughter, Ajd they are not afraid to show But they aren't all t professors. Their knees at ease at teas? my wife, and my mother. As possibly yen may know, poor A Utnh country store keeper recent- take it's just what be expected. When a doctor makes a mistake Hoaston, Texas, Post Pispatch. fishes are a source' of profit both in ly made a sale for $L ne threw .' ; If it were not for evanglllsts the sea and on the- land. ,, . , the dollar Into the Bawdust box tin- he .buries it. ., , When a judge makes a mistake it The knee of the flapper some, men would die without knowstove and spit in the cash der the ' t becomes a law of the land..n i Always show, ing how mean they were. . There ' are c btaier-thanjadrawer. . s ... When a. preacher makes a But who Inspects her elbow machines v mid lictitf tlinniH tplstnk, don't know. - Jake Coleman "rt says the bootlegeer machines bnt every once lu a white" What do people do for ; a' ; guide nobody" knows the difference has many temptations a ad few Something happens to prove thnt all when makes a mis' don't have any But when an editor they ' ' The other day we met. an old trials. "i. take . ' ; conscience. aviators are lighter than air, ' , . Now old scout.. enr much wjth money, , n " . , - . . ; ' .J ' I.NEBRASKA KANSAS making of Washington .u!!BDto roP. ao to tt.u. O00 SOT cJ?co fight for conservation in MicblCurwood ' is enh, his home 'state. trying to leave the matter of conser vation but of polUfcsffffllt' naturally is meeting very active opposition. He urges that what remains of our forests should be put In the hands of experts rather than be left to the merciesof political appointees. When It was suggested that he . Elbows and Knees. , Why are the flapper's elbows, ' bad If yon please The wild boar "of India attacks I0"?" w WKlvn- - ' I wonder, no much rustier without provocation, and so doe the tvi I'd bore of America. Than her knees? . , lncy are experimentlnt with . Fln Timcs-TJnlow IWuay. Wild wht1 in Arable the word "hoi" means !?WJn: wil1 , . - . ,, . country. "an old man while la English arv.r.n. But what we'd like to ask you flnnnas's flok H ' rfawL a I -- Toothache ; Peculiar- itch can't be scratched. , it tAii 4o Tuum for efmnaniJi to rrow ub and 100 for men. - f DAIUJTA , Trappy - I50UTH , L .,. N JWiSCONSlNl tfc4 Woman," ' i there 'must be J. outbreaks In China, the BtatefDepartment hope for them like, ' thla last one. at such place aaj . Shanghai. Peking Is tnlandr Surrounded there by Boxers, the foreigner , were almost overwhelmed before;', relief cut Its way through. Shanghai is only a few miles from the sea, on a big river. In It several warships always lie, their guns ready. Helped by few land Ing ' parties, the "settlement's' volunteers could stand oS enor' mous odda. y' At wonst everybody could be taken elf. Property lost Is I mag- -' Inable; not a massacre. J. I NEA - ": H ., J...ll P. STEWART BY CHARLES EX-VIC- "; . Nil, 1 i Z ; . CUXIMGS - r ;; ..' ",W,T''WV ' 'IMINNESOH WOMIHG 4 : mamt i Dai ropuiaruj ' The same people that cry for "fewer laws" are the ones thsit complain of "fads" n ddemand fewer 8ubjecta in the scHoois. Doubtless they are right, both ways. ' ' Rut. whnu fault in ft? .Each rf the multitude of laws came in response to a demand froni the people. And each of the thirteen subjects that have 'just been eliminated from kfl the required list in California scliools was put there by some group whtctr lobbied it Into the law. The only way to keep down legislation or simplify curricula is for legislators and school trustees to misrepresent their constituents. Perhaps that is what they should o. But their constituents'at least T are not the ones to blame them if they do not. The ideal "simplified list," by the way, is an interesting atavism. It will consist mostly of the study of words and figures reading, writing: and arithmetic Half the will be ; ' dovoted to these, or their developments. ? By no means all the other half is free for the study of things.' There will be little that Would not have been equally appropriate to these children's grandfathers. The history and literature were already old before the grandfather was born ; the geography is a map of ports and realms,, arid the living world enters the scope of education only when it. can ' be identified in a book. . , school has its attention The scarcely pupil elemetary , In urience..4 . turned to the forces that move a world of electricity, automopelng one of constitutional law, biles, airplanes and radio. At the age when, the; instinct to this' second auestion would more question is most active, his qquestions are hot answered? lively to be 'tbtitfty out in a higher ; But 'he must spell and write as well as his grandfather court than that of Dayton In did, because, in his grandfather's day,, that, was the test, of which Scopes is to be tried, Darrow ; Mid. "education.' V. , . Thert he goes into business, and his stenographer does 'the HUNTED WOMAN." .1 his spelling for 'him, on a machine, while another machine does hi. arithmetic The thinar his Grandfather learned, at iames Oliver Curwood, who home,' he roust not learn at all, because they are no longer AVrote among other ' hovels , "The done m homes, an dit would be untraditional 19 do thepi in Hunted has been s 1 KTu " IK'ORTH DAKOTA! BUTTE -- , V ' GRf AT . . ra e IS) 'KASHIk'ZZ " - - , ' (r . , '" good-nigh- . t, |