I .- ..‘. .._ I ' l V I W. __, ,.__........ ..,..........» 9....-.-......o -lac-D _._, .. n 4 ,-her. . ~fforrda. After bean 1 genera ‘ levolutipn as Qarwin eqprcssed it. ...... °‘. vfitransferred to ‘ j ville prism who're she‘ spent three ‘web. 2 "» "Don‘t let anybody ' ll you that T’ boiled f lb o in prison =,haven’t any ecli and emotion." Huck adid. “Ily; best friend gurus was a Cgicago flu. friend of (gangster. er pa 3 1,¢1,'u-gs fir the Ohio ' htlband was haste no {are any animals with too feelings-" . iIrs'.'Bwk who-replllltd her fath- uu congressnrmn William , E. Ilason hi the national le¢i81I- ture whenrll died. is tile mullet‘ of The reaqlon she went said. ether f '3 Vi€VP°l'|lF-" “'11:: problem I was installed 1“ ions in! 0'3 *‘°'°“°l"; « , fggngdirga,” she’asscrt¢:l-._ l 434"" rrnaoav or B\_'0l.U1'lON ' " - "I8 OI-‘ IDNG _i8'l‘ANDlhG 1 f ' . ' Darwin Not Orilllatolro 59‘ “V” E to run Forth usable r l at 1. w. ‘r.-palms 1 written for the usual! Pru- ‘ Prof. J. T. Scopes, hijfh-"school in- '5 P o- 3 i 59.3009 . has self-developed -from _ lite to high levels pf versatility and by mans of fevolution. ” The legislators of Tegllncssue have a law preventing the d00- Felkious grounds. A j-conflict be- : religion and sciiencofiis be- llieved to exist by the Tennessee mwxiialters and they aha?! Put Ten- lndasoe on the aide/ofireligion at the expense of evolution. ‘ ‘ William Jennings Bryan. who M5 been engaged to defend the rilzljl of Tennessee to ce i science In the public schools. be] ' that Gen- ._a'sls is right and scion, wrong in teaching the way the taiiverse hastpairs requests He also bc- local issues. although there appears colic into existence.‘ one "i »Ive rm; ‘ so nan:-d Ia- L ’ while was to’. brine of evolution from beinit tanxht . .lnthe"publicschools'oftbetlItl-' 0'1 the Experience asiaucnanyuuisompeiz tobotels at night. - A ' lfiwas sparedusorae aysniteasaf A, ,1, Amer-.she arrivedin the prism diewaaassigssdtoa5obasseam_- resa. Sh-eworhsd zealously. sh stitch prison wi ‘ pocket she peat to dinner at the executive mansion with‘ ‘Governor mandations wlich the governor non- llas under advisement. , Then she went to Pittsburgh and got q 81!! a month job with room land board at . hotel-the William *.Penn. All went ;well until they Q called her in and told her they had found she was an §cx-convict.‘ “However they ‘were pretty dc- d In cent about it." she added."‘Thc house 12; om”, cone”, 6; wmgnm Juan 4 ‘hit 85¢} detective told me he couldn't con-loouege’ 5. Gena‘; w,,1¢.y.n C01. 3504 .st-icntiously allow.me to have ac- ; ocs the rooms :but that I might;wuuniuwr coinage. 3; p.,-}‘ cnl- qtaltc a‘ job in the kitchen. ‘lyqe. 1; st, bani; Universiiyt. 1: ‘The only thing that unnerved 1 me during the whole time was when 1 I spent three days in the Cleveland f “house-gr-xv” waiting for transfer to ' the woman’.-: prison. There the scum ‘hystcrics. that is the place that ‘would have ‘gotten’ me. But it :didn‘t." A . . ,iiso heavy before the revolution and. (i believe is every reason it will grow ,-larger than ever undcrthe agreement recently signed at Peking. “The concession clause-in the Pe- king Agreement holds out great pos- ‘ sibilities for Japan, especially in re- gard to the forests of Siberia. The soviet government will do its best to promote these concessions for the best f both countries. The ques- tions of the fishing rights and the 1 there I that concessions in Sagbalien are soon ‘to*;. bgginninx tn jngfify itself, “That .be taken up by negotiators and the satisfactory solutions will be found p out. « At the tirfe cf the audience. the protocol for the transference of the. administration of northern Sagha- lien to the soviet Russian delega- tion was signed st.Alexandrovsk in Saghulien. Within ten days after the signing, the Japanese army of occupation will have been complete-‘ ily evacuated. and the administra- 'tion of northern Saghalien turned 7over to Russia. 5 u‘ g l It is believed that the Russian dcl-i c-gates have sanctioned maid of Ja- ’in connection with Jere: thattln people have the rizllt to be some difficulty in putting an .aay what their children taught in the public ‘ ‘YB -do‘ I " Evolution means chmigc. Man ’ ‘ ' 'before he is borri, from one hryonic "to another‘ and after he is born. his entire life is a_ process of change. Butnin addition to this [recess of cvolutbn._thcre is c l nge 'floflns°of itself and its dlsscendantsb is it through- opttheagestforrnanhas longb flestncss in his horses. andvother ex- allenoes. in his cattle and lrflin by Eattention to artificial selection. , That is to say. evolution as a util- tarlan fact. is_notra new’ ' at ‘But. in the put. the processes if artificial selection were done b .9 interested not in philo- qrhocir lpeculation, but ' -results. Thus, the consequences of ‘evolution were known in ‘times without any,namc ‘put forth a hypothesis mid adaptability to epvironment "which seemed to answer ‘ling problem -of the way life and .aivironment,'seem to ii ..'l‘o.Darwin. therefore. tin bein been rdcd S - or evolution. as indeed he was. al- . though he owed much to u Nd mcnt officials. but speaking in gen-, shall be them into practic . Thesef c as almost all outstanding is- e issues that will be foughtssucs between Russia and Japan have now satisfactorily settled. and from ‘now on there will be negotiations for agreement on practice and also, on minor issues. Judged by the pres- ent atmosphere. it is believed fihat the satisfactory agreement will be bed by mutual concession on ‘both sides. Ambassador Kopp was asked at the press conference whether he. thought the recognition by Japan would hasten similar action on the part of America, and replied that could not tell what is going on in the minds of American govern- l eral. ;on, recognition generally; brought-a out more. i la the matter of his relational with the diplomatic corps in o- ltyogi the ncw'Russian Ambassador‘: relates that there is no reason w “special relations"'should be ere-; atcd between him and the other en-' voy representing countriu which hI.Vc not yet recognised Russia. lie alrruldy paid a visit on Dr. Eliot.j sador and the dean’ _ British ba ' of the diplomatic corps in Tokyo. . ....__4—.. TEACHERS‘ siimuss RAISED! 2 Causes Contribute to Average’ ' Annual I rease. in the number of‘ consolidated schools in many states‘ and the increase in the length of . term in many one-teacher schools 0 causes‘ contributing to a small increase in t 1924 over the preceding year. The average salary of the qjcq-pom lthc consolidated school shows an in-5 lcreasc of :53. , I ,‘ he salaries of. elementary teach- lers in_.:thc city schools, with few exceptions. slip; an tigers.-ssc from . . L -' "'_'“*"‘—“ ‘ Yet!-I’ year orci sof2500to IUEIAN AIIBASSADODIIIO ' _ 0 0 o c, iiaran l’0_RIALLlf saarsn :',_.l’:’_,...“’§,’.’-,’,‘,"‘,‘§'4"‘,,,f:,’," ,;;§';‘°,9j,.;_ Tiger Studio ; Bays our canals: in "rm-. "' °“"‘ °‘ 1°-°°° W‘ °‘’" “W ‘V’. Phone 2214 ‘ . . .d & ' inCre‘3C “C3 ‘92. ‘ " i ‘ _ . : . OW. . -..-._.-... -. ' or usual . g ‘ _. i - - ‘ ------: .;'0SAKA. Japan.--Dipwomatic re- 9 . ‘ * . "~~v gfm Hwy Sim” Russia and COLUMBIA-JEFFERSON CITY , . z 3 - 21-PASSENGER BUSSES’ ’ and rash several recom-A -ubaclt it with $100,000 for his son’.- 1. vg_ooLUIui N MONDAY, JULY 6,1925 pawn’: s'urWat:uoor.V‘ C‘ ass . -a‘aa.ooanar:aou.nairr has an enroll- v_er'sityof.Hissouri the im {all men... rim record leurohrnent of the Graduate School gives? it total ; About 46 per cent of rolled in the Graduate School are lfrom the four-year colleges of the ‘state. These charges appear in ‘the sour-i late Teachers College. 32: "Northeast lfissouri State Teachers ’ ‘College, 28; uthwest Missouri &State Teachers College, 28; South- least lissouri State Teachers’ Col- ilcge, 16; Northwest Missouri State ;Teachers College. ll: f‘"‘tfl|l Ml!‘- ulvte. ll: ' ' liege. 6; Washington University. 3 liege. : Nissouri- Wesleyan Col- iCulver-Stockton Colkge. 1 ‘ ln addition to all the four-year ‘colleges represented in the Graduate .School. nearly every university of standing ‘ the Mississippi Val- ’ley is also represent . re even duates from col- leges and universities extending from Yale. Columbia. and Mount liolyolre to California, and from Minnesota and Wisconsin to Texas. Mississippi. Alabama. and .l-‘lorida. An interesting feature of the en- rollment of the Graduate School is the fact that forty-seven of the stu- dents already hold the degree of Masterof Arts. , According to Prof. R. J. Kcrncr. ‘acting dean of the Graduate School. this great increase in the enroll- ment of the Graduate School here and in other schools throughout the country indicates a new era in higher education. Graduate work the teachers of the state of Mis- souri are beginning to understand the many material and intellectual advantages which go with the attainment of higher degrees is proved by the foregoing statistics.” he said. DIED HEAR TBROKEN WHEN HIS sozv WAS REPORTED LOST ~j———6-*-— uniu-4 Pr-s. ' HUDSON. Ohio.-"Jim" Ells- 'worth has come home to where his first great dashed to pieces on the roclts of a rural community's determination to remain rural. They brought “Jim” Ellsworth home in a long wooden box and bur- ied him bcncath a maple trcc be- side the bodles of his two wives. Ellsworth died in his villa near Flor- ence. Italy. a month ago, releasing life gladly because he believed hi.- son Lincoln had died in the Arctic Circle with Real Amuntlscn. .Last November the elder l'Ill.-- worth. a millionaire, his son Lin- coln. and Amundsen met at the Ellsworth home and planned the po- plar flight. Ellsworth agreed to sake and then went to Florence. Italy. to await his son. l 0 word came from the ncrth aft- ' er a week of waiting the old man ll? down and died. heartbroken at what he believed to be the loss cf Lincoln. his greatest treasure.‘ A few days later Lincoln came back as hero of the flight but it was too T-#0-—&— Two Cars Collide. iTwo automobiles collided at the intersection of Brosdvfay and (‘ y ne was driven by Jo in Parks. 1400 University Avenue. The Ollie? driver did not stop his car, after the collision. Both cars were-' slightly damaged. . - 1 Pictures of Children C Never Grow Up . ,Make an appointment 1 :t your home‘-if you pre- er. Lfl_A_AnQA v vv -I' Graduate School of the.Uni- following order: Central Mis- ~. ‘ Kentucky ‘ the memorial an-: 9. a n so ..a.|oaI-I«O‘O.O‘I'0-"‘|"I'-IVvI"CI“‘."“. Iv“‘ "1"!V"9 0 0000-0 . . . '. . . g s . s .1 1'! ill a I s s I -s s I III .s. or s s a 1 W95“. ‘Y."."."l“‘a"l“l‘."u".“i“.“:“ . . .__..fv ..._i...._. -- Thc K(‘lllU('l~.}' l‘i(~nc1‘r .\lx-maria Asst-ci:itiori has been organized for the purpose (if inzuigurating a cam- paign for $100,090 in the state of lientucity. and among Km.-ntuckians throughout the nation to cstablirh ' shrine at llarrodsburg. The shrine is to be in honor of the pioneer men and women who founded the state. according to Brooks Bradley Columbia. who formerly lived Kentucky. A reproduction of the Old-l""!1 known as llarrod'.~' recommended as building as a memorial to the lien- tucky plonecrs. it was this stock- adcd stronghold that contained within its narrow confines all the it-rncnt.-s that have made Kentucky 0 ,5 m -- C. '71 A v '1 V‘ 1 f :- .-_s \O amous. I this fort. Gen. George Rog- ers Clark planned his expedition for the conquest of the 3:rcat‘Iorth- west. By the acquisition of this to the original thirtccn colonies. an empire. . Z liarrridsliurg has not only the distinction of being the site of the first permanent pioneer S(‘lllv- in Kentuclfy. but also the Anglo-Saxon scl- the Alleghcnu-.~. specific features of A sculptun-d figum in bronze to symbolize the person, the spirit, and tin: era of the Kcntuclty pioneer; a replica of llarrod':= Port to be cquipprd with furniture. implements and utensils as used in the fort; and ] Resident: of W. B. Nowell. Jr.. I20 \\'cst\wood Avenue. i3lans ‘Memorial at , ' Site .of Oldest &ttlement in western tcrritr.-rs’. lhcre was added . in .Coli¢mbia v_’ mvmt-rial purl; to include 1-=t:ituc. the fort. and lo t-mlirucc thv l’ium~.‘-r (‘trim-tcry, wliiclv\is tbv oldest one in Kcntuclcy. -The Pioneer Ccrnctt-ry. located on Old Fort Hill, in llzirrod:-burg (Kt-ntucky's 0l¢‘l(!~1. town. founded June 16. 1774). has eight distinc- tiv.-l_v different styles of gravi- markings. from the rude. unlcttci-mi surface .~'.«:~m- of the early pi:>nccr.-V. who had no limb: to carve a mum- or (into. lo the finishrd Italian marble, placed ll‘.-crc by the lust generation that buried its._dcad in ' the sacred spot. The .~p1~cificatinn.< (‘l7'll)l'3(‘(‘ a r-gvnilsolic heroic figure in bronrm. rt-pres:-riting lb.‘ l_.‘pi('8l Kenturlsy pioneer. the figure In be suppurtml by a griuiitc base; the fact‘ of tin- base lo ornamented with bus-I-;-licf in bronze. showing .1 piunm-rfziniily group. limb of the vlhtu‘ three sides of the hast‘ are '- suitable inscriptions chow- ~ date, nature and ]lUl'pnI~(' of the memorial; the nzima-s of ten cf the it-aiding pioncvr forts or ."l.':liOll.\‘ in Kcntuclcy. in (‘xi:~‘.encc prior to 1783; and ".l.c l‘.'lfllt'S of tin plum-or lcad-''r.<. ; Mi:-:. Enid Yandvll. xi l{t*nt,u<-lay unm:.n of ‘world fmnc in ‘hr art '4 .>t‘J'[‘iut‘l‘, has been cltcm-n to ('4. Iii. \\'(n’l-2. ‘ 'llc form of mt-nmrinl \t':u~ o'e- tormincd by n spec?-il :onmiitt«-c from the state at large, appointed by Bishop Charles ll. the association. I . osilstse a-.. -n... . .‘sr‘a‘l'I“a*lloo-J-slrslsssaasis-asslssgsssaso A 6 stores so-ll_these shirts at '00 8 value. this great _ van Remember this is a -vwuv 2 .855»- -O0 100 Dozen Genuine Imported Broadcloth Shirts sios . We tell you with _all the confidence; at our com- mand that this'Genuine Broadcloth Shirt is the bet‘-it shirt in the State of ‘Missouri at the rice. A combination of the Barth stores buying give us ad tage. IBROADCLOTH SHIRT and the price is only . $1.95 With‘ or Without Collars ' ‘ SEE THEM IN OUR \VlNDOWS Our Policy-—_W ‘give you values every da, i th year—something'dbing every day ‘ y n 8 é-1°‘iinlrfifilrfei- *$Z€€€€€%H€‘b§+? %I+P I° oa ' ‘ __o . . . °-' . , 9 . . M e Bold No ( learance Sales, 5 . . 9 "O-x.'I.'C‘C'.‘v9 ore» o.o , . , ,.o I.I ..i|ii¢ii .. ""00'OvIIisI-so-s-s-s..a.a.s.uO o.o.~tII¢04»IassIsAas 4-Q! Olssos p Many $3.00 and are still giving - 0 . . - -_;-_.--...-....--a.“,“.'.l.|.’.‘._. O“C‘.‘-C 0-O-WWI |"O-O-30$!I‘II‘l'I0O-OJOUOI Oil-Ilil O 5 s I . GENUINE: Iuroivrso I 1 4 I A \\’oodc0Cl;. ‘of I.-ouisvillc-, honnrziry cl;~.‘:miun nf "'.'OvIOOO-O 0sIssss.sn... 4 ; JA PAN§8 GOVHEIRMEVT I'll] lend I-"inanelal Aid ‘to Operate lts Concessions in North . & ‘ H By United Pro- ernmcnt finally has settled upon plans for operation of its oi c oessions in North Sughalicn. company will be established and thi- government will have some share in the enterprise. As soon as the 11 receives the sanction of the business men who are interested in the com- pany. it will officially be announced. The decision of the government in participate in the enterpriw by lend- ing financial as well :i.~ moral .'tl(l to the new company was inllucrtccd by the attitude of the Navy Depart- ' fuel for the entire Japnn(*.~4.- navy. A the initiative of Adniiral Tnkarabc. Navy Minister. Vice-Adnurzil .\'al-;:.- sntu. an expert on fuel qua-.~".inn in the .lapan(‘.s'c nu\'_v, is s(~l(~:".vd in the company. H - l." i-rpm-tr-ti in be the president of he t‘nmpi.l‘._\‘ after the concern is cat.-ibli:-ha-d. The gov(-rnmcnt lll\‘l‘$Ul‘.l'."i'. thi-' rntcrprisv is l'.\llTllill('fi at 730,- um» yon out of a l'll‘tl capitalizzitiuii of 10,000,000 yen. The gm-vrnmt-nt'.~. share is t.» be returned in five _\‘(‘:i:‘5. uftt-r a five-your interval from the time of the company's I-st:il.li.-"L mcnt. The government iilsu E-inal- Itz‘-¢-lf in every pn.~-ail-lv wag.‘ in the- exploitation of the territory. In c.‘.‘- chairgc for the ll!~'.\'lSlEHt('L' thr rum- pany promises in (‘ll\'l(l(- all pr!-fits above 1.’: per (‘mil l-vtwt-tn lbv gm"- ernmcnt and the b'l'»7.lY‘|‘ll -ldc-r» equally. The .\lit.-'ui f‘omp.m;.'. (ll-;ur;i and ('ompan,v and Nippm (lil (‘.nnip;m_v. all of whmn were in-1\'il,\' inn-rv.~tr«i in os.u<.A. my 6.—Japancsc gm». :: An nil on the Mississippi River. ment which holds the view that there - 605-7 Broadway i ¢-'/4,/,7 a ST. LOUIS.--“Contrary cncral opinion. the stcamboating business is witnessing a revival." - says ('spt. llcnry Lcyhc, a veteran “Trad-c has been better in the last five or six years than in the days when of business to be had. both pas- senger and freight." .-\ moonlight night. a’/§DIsmcr gliding softly along the forest- fringed shores of the Mississippi. and a jazz orchestra blaring forth What a combi- notion! ‘ younger gener-.ition. always in quest “"i"“l°di thing try a Missourian arsnt H. of the romantic and side of life. cannot resist the lure. Tllouliallflz-' of them each \l'3('ll board the cxcun-ion boats that cm- bark from St; Louis.’ Mon \\'iln9'£‘ hair has grayed in the s('r\'i('c of piloting craft along the Father of Writers will tell you that tirnes businiss just as it has altered the a.-
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[Pl by. for "IE mgin “fit!
noise. But such a band '.
last two "minutes now.
“One custom remains frag
early times. and that is 15. '
Jcncy of pernoizs to and
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soon as the bout contcll ‘nun ‘
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J-ll-Fillll L..
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if you want to buy our , a «
NOTICE
Day and lfiilht Transfqr
furniture and livestock’ s
Joab 8: Jabe Sublctt.
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near H_.»ulBlIR(lE~:
in tmrrl at he ' E.
Square Dml Lunch 2 ..
Phone I337 SQ! :
Learn’ to
DANCE C
Five Balloon Tires
JOIIN N, TAYLOR
EDACHlr;ni
Already a familiar and attractive
‘sight on all roads.
For one ‘thing, the Special Coach
really accommodates five adult
passengers in comfort. And then
the body lines and special ap-
pointments are singularly smart
in lllt‘ firat wells lrilb-d in Nurtl‘. ,-v ,_. .g ~. .. -« ' ‘ ,
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