Evening Star Newspaper, December 1, 1922, Page 35

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“Who the Tax Dodgers” By David H. Blair Commissioner of Internal Revenue See Page 25 in The NATION'S BUSINESS for December How honest is the aver age man_when he pays taxes to his Government? And the rich man? The huge Corporation? Who are the dodgers who try to get out of paying? Who are the dodgers who skimp and cheat when they make out the reports> HOW do they cheat? How are they CAUGHT? Who are the people who OVERPAY the Goverfnn;,enl: ”Arr g“l{ one of them: you wi to know the RIGHT an- swers to thesc questions, find out from the man at the top—Commissioner Blair. He tells the inter- esting, surprising, :'alunhg: facts in The Nation’s Busi- ness for December, just placed on sale. _Aud 26 other good A_rticlgs, Departments and Editorials on Subjects such as: Jlow the Bureau of tandards HELPS B ness in Government Stop the W Farmers in Business How to Get ALL the HEAT from Your Coal! Do Our Movies Hurt U Teaching Farmers H How Muck Can a W to Sell Y. President ut AIR in Your ires urope Pay Her Debts? Save Gasolin WHY Should \ College—Half Study, Half Work “ue Douglas MAI' TELLS Business Conditions . What Organi Business is Doing SIBLE Editorials Fourtecn S Read the December number of The \ TION'S BUSINE if vou like TRAIGHT THINKING on busi- ness subjects. It con- tains cold. hard facts, but they read like FICTION. Buy The NATION’S BUSINESS “A Washington Magazine” for December 25¢c a Copy Get it irom vour Newsdgaler or mail order (mentioning Offer number) m’ U. S. Chamber of Commerce Mills Bldg., Washington — — — — FOUR OFFERS — — — — No. 1-A, Single Copy. No.2-A. Trial Term (4050, No.3-Al Part Term (137.1. No.4-A, FULL Term (3 yrs.), OR Give Nos. 2, 3 or 4 as a CHRISTMAS GIFT Besingl will soothe that The first applicationof Resinol usually takes the itch and burn right out of ec- ma and similar skin-affections. This gentle, healing ointment seems to get “ight at the root of the trouble, restoring the skin tohealth in a surprisingly short time. Resinol is sold by all druggists, VICHY (FRENGH REPUBLIC PROPERTY) Medical Profession for many years as possessing great Medici Sore Throat Wisdom To relieve Sore Throat you must get at qualities. Its use in the theseat of the disease, counteracting the windows of a home for that one isA\‘lo-e f’.l'-bfiglii igni ?:umud combina T one purpose. ol 8 tion o taste .nd LINE taken upon the first aj -ance f et i e e e '8e a Iif 'oal wis- e dom and buy a bottle of TONSILINE e e SONE 3 e ot HIRES TURNER 18 the Sore Throat Remedy —best o SO necked fellow on the bottle when WASHIN(;-TO':. D. C. tothe drug storetoget it.. - - L2 5ooc. Hospical Size, 81.00. itching Skin l BY FREAKISH WEATHER _1sons injured, and damage which prob- edicinal Properties e Bottled BEITZELL & GO G. CORNWELL & SON JOEN H. MAGRUDER ! 98-Foot Motor Craft Ends 35,000-Mile Cruise of World MIAMI, Fla., December 1.—Escort- ed back to American soil by a fleet of welcoming craft which met her sev- eral miles at sea, the ninety-eight- foot motor cruiser Speejacks. said to be the smallest boat ever to circle the ——-lzlnbe. slid safely up to a dock here at noon yesterday with her party of |adventurers, headed by Albert Y. {Gowan, her owner, of Chicago, and jended a 25,000-milé voyage which be- ;gan from Miami in September, 1921. |~ At the dock the world wanderers re- ceived a rousing ovation from halt a ;hundred friends, most of whom saw them off on their conquest of the seas more than a yvear ago. and later were tendered a Thanksgiving banquet at a hotel. 8ale. once a thousand miles from land With scarcely enough gasoline to keep one of its motors running until it reached a port, the sturdy showed not a scar on its hull and not once had its engines required more than their everyday mechanical at- tention, Mr. Gowan declared. save for many sleepless nigh churning seas, when it was practic: experiences. “I wouldn't take five million dol- lars for the trip, but I 1dn’t make it again for fifty millio commented. Members of the Party. In the party, besides Mr. Gowan. were: Mrs. Gowan, Capt. F. P. Hog who in 1916 captained Princeton foot ball team: Jack Lewis, who d signed and superintended the o struction of the boat; ira J. Ingra- ham, photographer in chief: Bernard Rogers of Chicago, a guest: J. A. Sterling. assistant engincer and wire- less oper. or: E. 1i. Brooke, engineer and movie photographe; David Willlamson, mate and. pho- tographer; William Saulby, steward, and Bert Lindekins, cher. The trip was planned more than two vears ago by Mr. Gowan, who is; vice president of the Portland Cement but a licensed navigator as as his ambition first to ex- of the ds never . and. in a than a hundred feet in h these things in view he eejacks, sparing no ci- king her the most ible. The bo: 25.000 S expended in titting the party. ejacks weights sixty-four she has two 300-horsepower en- . ®iving her a speed of twelve a half knots an hour: she has & teen-foot beam and draws onl r tanks carry i 00 miles. For trip. a sail to steady her in rough seus and two machine guns for emer- ency use were carried. After plore s world, inlets, ri before touch: except by canoe ond, (0 traverse the worlc t Tes length. W built the pense 1n worthy leaving Miami headed for Panama and Tahiti. From there on n Island, Fiji Austral 1sland: the party thence t to the Islands. New “mit K H iralty | Bali, were touch- some of was taken N for With a stop at the Island of chells for gasoline. Through the sea, 1.000 miles to the Mediter- n, the party and chugged Alexandria. i Points Next Visited. ited were Athens. Naj noa. Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Gibraltar. me the trip along the coast into Cairo and Then c: of Africa to the Canary Islands and to Cape Verde and finally to San Juan. and down and 1acr ami. | Three times the Speejacks was re- ported lost, but each time turned out del Ly storms. d taken the advice of we would never have to be onl ind u Again and again we were t because we were stri ing the hurricane season. Buf went straight on and alwavs “d—just happened—to skip fety just in time.” arious points on the trip the ks lost members of her crew, ecoming even more adven- turous, struck out to see certain iparts of the world by themselve: Instead of the seven Americans sh B ped with. the little craft inging back i i Al throuzh the journey M {kept in_ touct {means of radio. once picking up iles away and alw. {masoline were consumed during the jtrip and 100,000 feet of film taken. The most interesting incident of a seasick wedding aboard near Ta- THANKSGIVING MARRED | Half Dozen Persons Hurt and Big Property Loss in 3 West. By the Associated Press. ST. PAULL, Minn. December {.— Interrupted wire communication, de- layed train service, half a dozen per- I ably will run into several hundred thousand dollars was the toll revealed today as the result of freak Thanks- giving weather in Minnesota, North iand South Dakota and w ern Wis- {consin. High winds, rain and snow iwere reported in various sections of the northwest. Most of North Dakota was blanketed with several inches of snow. A gale was sweeping Lake Si- perior. Near Aberdeen, S. D.. 200 poles belonging to the Dakota Central Telephone Company were broken oft by sleet, snow and wind. Two freighters were swept out into the harbor at Duluth, and a bulletin was posted warning of further violent storms on Lake Superior. ‘Temperatures dropped considerably, a thirty-five-degree fall being record- ed within a few hours here. What More Can be Asked of glass for the windows Should be coywnbite in clearness, bnufifu;il: finish and lutely accurate vision? Polished Plate glass e:;llalqdien all of these i Buffeted and tossed by storm and little craft 4.600 | passed the Suez | were | ! the whole trip, Mr. Gowan said, wnsi | Nr. nece; was the had : to finger. hour _and ) he jhere was ent the world. lother i would be stituti Mr. Gowan | R EREDVEDEVEVNEREVERELLER se -3 alqal &l gal ol 240 Sl Sl ol 3l gal Ll gl Sal Sal Sl dal Sall 22l Sl 44 L hox?) IEREVNEE ORI DED | 1 7 RERE L WLEDEDED LR DEVEVEVEDRDRVERVELE § M%%m%%*&%%@%@%@%%%%%%&% iowan to do him a favor, which turned out to be a marriage outside the three-mile limit, because it was | ary to live a year on the island | maintaining that “the people don't before being granted a license there. | want ‘The groom asked when the sea een 5 and § in the morning. The mony crowd accompanied the prospecti bride and groom and we sailed away | o to the three-mile mark. had reached become so seasick that the captain | to rush without waiting for answers or the | When we returned it took an | of the first to greet Mr. Gowan Mr. Gowan said that data, film and facts D v York, New York Yacht Club. \ING STAR, WASHINGTON. l%LAHOMA PROSECUTOR i IS NOT SO WILD TODAY ‘ Explains He Dropped Liquor c_mn { to Clear Docket for His Successor. THE EVE at Tahiti asked | ’ By the Associated Press. TULSA., Okla, December 1.—Still prohibition,” but taking _a {slightly different tack in his defianc | of the governor and the attorney ger |eral's department, W. F. Seaver, |county attorney. 'met Clifforda W. King, assistant state’s attorney gen- ral, here today to explain his dis- {missal of cases against alleged liquor {law violators. Mr. Seaver said he welcomed the visit. Two days ago he challenged bride' ‘lhe whole attorney general's staff to bride’s | come to Tulsa and see “what they calmest. 1 told him be- was arranged for 6 o'clock. Before we | . the happy party had through the ceremony | placed on the a half to get them off the ¢0Uld do about it. of liquor charges ng to the state prohibitory stat- utes, under which he claimed i stepped off the Speejac I almast_impo: homas. the man who 1utomobile around the to clean up takes office January 1 —_— in the Pyrenees has invented based on the principle of feh, it is claimed, will « of oil-bearing areas. obtained on the trip turned over to scientific in- jacks will leave tomorrow where she will dock | ned today"that he | D. C, 2 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1922. Let Us Add to Your Christmas Savings Bring your Christmas 5 Savings Check (on any bank) to us. Open a savings account and we will Present You With $1.00 American Commercial& Savings Bank The Bank That Pays 4% on Savings. T Futnre rome. 7¢h and G Sts. N.W. Edward Voigt, Jr. P'resident SRR Teamnorarv Location, 635 F St. N.W. Robert €. Shaw, Cal Yuletide waits for no man—and Christmas is here. With such a stupendous stock of nationally known Jewelry, Diamonds, Sil- verware, Phonographs, etc., and with such easy terms of payment offered, Schwartz’s urge you to fill your Christmas needs at once—and have it off your mind. Never have we shown such a large and varied assortment of gifts—and never have we offered such values. Come Now and Select Your Gift. Make a Small Deposit. Take it Home— AND PAY AFTER JANUARY 1, 1923 Gruen Cartouche Wristlets Accuracy and Beauty Combined The style illustrated is one of several styles. and charming gifts. Beautiful—Brilliant * Sweetheart Diamond Rings The Gift Supreme distinctive priced at— Take the Here is a beautiful Blue White Gem set in an exclusive Sweetheart mounting of Plati- num or Gold; set about with four additional diamonds (NOT chips). It is truly a beautiful ring, and as a gift —SUPREME. 7 $100-L A Small Deposit Immediate Possession PAY NEXT YEAR Other Diamond Rings from $15.00 to $1500.00. Ivory Pyralin Toilet Articles The most complete stock in Wash- ington. AIll hard-to-find pieces to complete the set you have started. Prices from 75¢ to $125.00 Make a Small Deposit Immediate Possession - PAY NEXT YEAR The New Edison A limited .quantity of the New Edison London Upright models have been allotted to us. The biggest value in phonographs we have ever offered at $100.00 $5 Down puts it in your- 4750 Pay a Little Down PAY NEXT YEAR We have the Gentlemen’s Veri-thin and Ladies’ Gruen Watches in Washington. JEWELERS Women’s Genuine ELGIN R Wrist Watches Set in 14-Kt. Solid White or Green Goid Cases, beautifully hand-en- graved. This is @ wonderful valuc. and it will make a delightful gift for her Come in tomorrow and see it —then buy on our wonderfully easy 5350 Make a Small Payment Take Home the Watch PAY NEXT YEAR All of them are will make This one is ‘Wristlet Home largest stock of Pearls 4 Tos. We can show you a delightful assortment of LaTausca, Peerless, DuBarry, Richelieu and many other makes of pearls, In various lengths. $5 and Up for Strand A Small Deposit Immediate Possession PAY NEXT YEAR Shaving Sets We have the largest assortment o Shaving Sets in Washington. Any m: will appreciate one for Christmas, and we have one for any amount that you would want to spend for that particular : $5 to $35 Make a Small Deposit Immediate Possession PAY NEXT YEAR Open Saturday Evenings Until Christmas T2 S AxAZ " {ul value.” Give her a set for Christmas. OPTICIANS USE RADIUM Do you suffer from -Nervousness, Insomnia, Neurasthicnia or High Blood USE RADIUM. Are you in agony with pain of Rheumsatism, Neuritis or Arthritis? USE RADIUM. 1f Constipation, Kidney Trouble or Prostatitis is your dis- order—USE RADIUM. Many eminent guthori(ics also give this advice. As sold in our preparations,-it is HARMLESS INEXPENSIVE EFFECTIVE On sale at O’DONNELL’S DRUG STORES RADIUM PRODU&S CORPORATION 1105 Connecticut Avense N.W. Main 6797 Anniversary Chest 1847 Rogers Bros. The 75-Year Plate Silverware (26 Pieces) A handsome blue velvet-lined chest goes with every purchase of this set. It is a wonder- $22.85 Make a Small Deposit—Immediate Possession PAY NEXT YEAR Mesh Bags 7 Of gold and silver. in many designs. We are offering as a big special, an all-soldered link, both silver and gold filled ; an extra specialat Q.15 Other Bags Priced From $5.00 to $100.00 Make a Small Deposit Immedidte Possession PAY NEXT YEAR The Brunswick The Brunswick, the mast beautiful model under $200; . the York Model, with all of the Brunswick im- provements for ABABANAIETATA A AR RIANASAIAIATANAIAHBHIHINANINE N A L A A A A AR A AR A A M RASANA AN RN IIAI I e s

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