The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 20, 1920, Page 6

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We'll Say So Today's Heat Bet-—<etting up i" etructing the nurse to cut out that the middie of the night to skim the| “goo-goo” stuff. foam off the home-brew. (This is one| At 10 months he could talk “on of the late accomplishments of our|any subject,” and, when he cele next-door neighbor.) brated his first birthday, he had read cee and assimilated the Old Testament, ‘Won, irrigation mafe the Yakima| At 14 motiths he had the New Tea - tament down, too. valley. And now it's doing the same thing for Vancouver, B. C. When he was two and « halp Pg? a years old this prodigy had mastered history and geography and could } One of our lady friends who ob} iaix ratin and French, not to men jected very much to giving ber age tion Danish. ‘The two men running for prest ie set egg eas in span ant Hoe kept on learning until, when r oe [me Sees Seay. lee am ihe was five, his mother thought it dent, chosen by the delegates of the very, very silent. Gitignified to nurse @ child Se two polition) partion, eoleqted by the dite knew more than the average Ph.Ds | representatives of the people all over| We herewith nominate our butcher | | E=| The Seattle Star Doctor Frank CRANE'’S Daily Article Two Newspapermen. The First Estate. No Thrill in Oratory. Fed Up on Ideals, (Copyright, 1920) and wane @ mantha, $2.76) year, Press Service out of city, 806 per month; # months, # of for € months, or state, Tbe onth, farrier, city, Le por week. Silence sweeter is than speech.—Craik. | Coal:Is a Basic Necessity, But Nobody Seems to Care Coal is a basic necessity of life. Without Again the owners, at least, should be satis- ey and consequently life on this con- fied. They get more coal mined per work- t would be impossible. ing day, at a less cost per ton in March than y . >, " t. ; |the United States, these final 4.\for the hi¢h jump in the Olympic Two groups are directly resporisible for in February, with an increased profit of 45 oes fo a pon at pea a be games. He's tho highest jumper We| markable youngnter died soon aftene { 4 D ction of coal, and a third group, the per cent. thé Sormel evolution of the. mase|™™™ weed: : ic, i cerned with it 1 b the mi ? cee Thos the-world was savet-the time ie, is deeply concerned with it. How about the miners will, bossed and unbonned, the net of reading « million columns of P ; th SHERMAN SAID IT AND ITS | _ | The coal beds of the earth, which the — «The average number of days worked by enult of all our strife and clamor, tt oe ete oe tink: Gee Bsa sia tas werkt wee very youn, Sach miner, Sing Mash wes given 0 1 mp PT Ty By Vegetation when the world was v * ainst 17 in February. | m poor boob who buys a war gouvenir a the hands of comparatively few against 17 in Fe sats | it the sort of men, by and laree.| only to find on turning It upside OUR QUESTION BOX 7 Fy now in a nag livin a cheeh There were 27 possible working days in pro and eon, and taking one consid-| gown that it was manufactured by £| “Dear We'll Say So: I am a young men, who own them ar ‘a Ss ve March; the miners were permitted to aver- Neb eration with another, the kind of| souvenir company in New Yori. girl This is leap year and I desire ; , er number of men—the coal m which the ge 19 of them. Eight days of lost time; a) a Ned tay! pred Papeete. hove base Aged eee to propone to wny sweetic, Shall & ‘ mitted to work in he ge th oe on eight days of no pay; eight days of enforced a Sad LP . vile over that, the twe men wne| ANOTHER FoR THE SCRAP- set on any knees 1 do 13" group owns, in order that they, too, | ring: eight days when the miner’s family Wa (yi Sete tht Amana Weabelins peto- BOOK eet i make a living. When the first group ree = traph of liberal and conservative,| Tt took C. W. Twim, who always} eee ; had to eat but had no income. ;| cuts these personal mentions out; What looks like the band wagon b - th sl 4 le ry hg re That is not satisfactory to the miners. Is ss efficient? it any wonder they wanted a six-hour day at Goal Besduetion statistics compiled by the the same rate of pay as for eight hours? | Senate de Bown she nrg ae and pastes them in a book, just #ix|often turns out to the First Presbyterian eooclabls "land a half hours to work three gas | wagon. stations for eight gallons of gas. eee parr gan 9 Sages In the evening he took his famfly| News ftem: ‘The Danube river 2 ‘ | . Catholic and Protestant and infidel, “4 ¢ ral trade commission from reports sub- And the public? How about it? university professor and livery stable|t® the theatre, parking his car out | Rows thru countsies i whet 62 1 itted by 1081 mine owners for the month Fight days of lost production out of every hand, horny-handed railway fireman oa vd brn irae Sek canaa lt ee are wre oie cap Roce f March indi i e in the profit month in the year means 96 days of no pro- and lly-fingered coupon clipper, » home aren one ‘1 indicate an increas DP ; H Seyret Baw agg cog RP or pper'| topped. ‘Then be discovered that |who are cursing water, ‘ ton of 13 cents, or 45 per cent. duction for the entire year. Has that any- pean serppeen gb pcb bor ae zne-\ Someone had aypiioned the gas out iin | © So that the owners, at least, must consider thing to fe with bs ay mae me rofits States timberioth; Gane tat @ |9¢ bie Fm iis se al, soap didn’t help éirty-potle iP ss efficient. increased 45 per cent in a single month? males, old and young, optimists and| | Am open me ear 8 sy any. Pee 8 average cost per ton of mining coal Is coal mining as at present conducted the pessimints, wets and drys, Garish a come to onan bate on ve a bed . i most efficient way for a nation. to manage and Gomperish, Palmerish and Debs: “Why” sexys ‘Dempsey, reduced 4 per cent in March — Febru- aga v. i ish, the Episcopalian bishop and the|Yoo#! exhanst he could be arrested | “should I go to fight? I had a wife 1 ir , and the output per working day increas- its power resources t It would certainly seem jtown atheist, the Atlantic Monthly for what he would ray, to look out for.” « bd 5 per cent, a better way might be devised. and Vanity Fair, the Rockefeller in- ooo. cee stitute and Christian Science, New-| Most of us leave our footprintr in| M. Dempaey was Jack's only-eup |port and Wichita, the kind of peo-| the sands of time, but the motorman|port. She tried to hold him up for |ple that admire Woodrow Wilson | has tracks before him, 40 thous. 4 and the kind that vole for Laurence eee cee ~ |Y. Sherman, readers of the Boston] “What good is woman suffrage?’ | Young wag—T lost my ‘handker~ | Transcript and readers of the Hearst| one of our candidates for sheriff in-|Chief this morning, but I should papers, and Tom, Dick and Harry,| quires, after canvassing the Capitol| Worry, the wind blew it for me.” jand our folks and the folks that live| HI) district. “None of ‘em would | |the other side of the railroad tracks, | admit they were old enough to vote.” | jand Aunt Bue's family and Uncle eee Eb's, and the Boggses and McCanns| “No, I couldn't sing because I had Writes for The Star Today on : and Ole Olesons and Einsteins ard|a frog in my throat.” \Cohens and Preemyczks and Pobe| “What kind? Bull?” Gonastchefs and Vasconcellonses and eee Bassompierres and Orsinis and the HOT WEATHER HISTORY Katzenelienbogen Katzevervonkots- Slightly Jazzed Hurry the Decision Antisuffrage Dbitterenders have attempted thelr councilor of the town of ‘Trowbridge, Engtand, | tast possible blow at the doctrine that women equally maid if young men were to see young girls in| with men are American citizens, and equally en- modern bathing suit they would not marry; dowed with the same rights and duties, Mrs. H. A. L. Fisher, wife of the minister ot ‘The petition to restrain the secretary of state who contends that instead of militating | from performing bia obvious duty contains no marriage it “would lead to the best mar | new argument against suffrage; it raises no un- the marriages which result in real appl | decided constitutional question, and brings up no Thermometers for ledge and Because they are based on knew real problem, ‘nora! or legal. It is merely a weak WILLIAM VER Gareprechenluftachiossers, and the| Christian Heinecken, born fa Den- ding as well as true love"? fteatt, ‘The attempt to postpone national suffrage until after PEC ILLIAM B. COLVER soldiers and sailors and slackers and| mark, 1721—199 vovecnd ago—started P te 50 Oe Oe Ne eee it tae one | te, november sleotions. we pacifista, and you, and me, and alllin to be the xmartest Dane who ever REE views as expressed are the views ‘The petitioners haven't a leg to stand on. Prob UNDREDS of millions of work-| government operntion the ronds went |the rest of this hodgepodge, pot-}was—and kept it up until his intel- tor revels | Sbly no one knows it better than they themselves. ing capital and eredit arg ted | back into private hands and, separate | pourri, olla-podrida, Irish stew, New| lect got the better of him. Chris- in. conceatmen: And if the District of Columbia court doen't deny|up in goods and commodities which | operation betng resumed, broke down | England boiled dinner and wet hash, | tian was all brains and no physique | Call at the which we call the U. 8. A. and long|and could not stand the strain. the two men, as I) Jt is said of him that he spoke an/ There is a fundamental oer gga i the petition, the supreme court will. Blut the goallcannot be moved to market. Prices| aiain in lems than 90 du: of those who believe, with sincert ich, should | ROPAd for by these bitterenders may be achieved.|mount higher and higher, not be| It ts easy to interpose an an ex.|may it wa the humgn body Is something wh = | The courts may dilly-dally in this case as they are|cause there are not goods enough to| Planation that on March 1 the rail-|started to say, who, after all is said/hour or so after he was born, in- concealed and mentioned only with extreme Fe | o, teone to do.’ They may consider a summer va-|supply the demand, but because the | Toad administration turned back the|and done, do represent, show forth “ and those who believe. io beautiful | Cation more important than immediate suffrage. | ood# cannot be shipped. roada aa mere pites of junk, but the/and incarnate this complex people, |ent of any Cause, the Martyr to any Savings Department and glorious thing in Wchools of thought | The district court 1s in session now. It may de| Capital is tied up: credit grows| “tures do not bear out thie state jars eT Te Sutter of shame that it must not | cide at onca, Then probably the case will be ap-|tight; business hesitates and coal! Ol et tocsmetives m| Members ef the Vourth Metats,| pot tan Suden: toe grey that knowledge of it must pealed to the federal supreme court. The justicen|cars are hauling the 1930 crop Of/ >) a) tne end of government| which has become the First. and just wanted somebody BANK OF CALIFORNIA National Association Second at Columbia eee all on their alleummer vacation, They do not return] So far as I know, there ts fust ene! 16 same time in 1916, and the per.| war we did not find a Soldier who|all, know all, feel all and the view that ts coming | % the bench until October, unless moved by anjthing upon which both the believers! contage of cars in repair and fit for|could waken enough enthusiasm tw| And the nearest we could come to by educators, physicians, extraordinary impulse to serve the American public/in private ownership and the bellev-| service wes likewine in favor of the | get elected. have given most thought | 12 @ critical moment. It tan’t often the supreme |ors in rnment ownership of rail! ratroad administration. ‘The silvertongued Orator could t yout the young; that ignorance | of this court—the highest court in the land—ere|astomobiles, specation One Guentey than te wee ati= Bren at the abe 40 our greatest geaey en’ averean te ‘and maiden | Court has permitted business to interfere with its|roads fully agrea. It is that maxt-| tpder unified operation tn 1918 and | not seem to move us in open, frank and honest | vacations. That is well known to the bitter-enders|mum efficiency can only be had if| with substantially the same equip | Moneytags likewise appeared to and shame | Who selected the vacation period to hurl the suf-|thee raiironds are one eperaUng| ment, the railroad administration | have lost his persuaatve touch. It ts that boys and girls | frase question into the courts, cait, freight tonnage was 403,000,000,000| We were a bit ahy of the Scholar, facts of sex, taught It would be most regrettable to permit the sum | RICHEST ROADS CAN'T an againet 277,000,000,000 In 1915 un-jthe Expert, the Business Man, the tly the handiwork of God as expressed | mer play of nine judges to postpone for four years HAVE “PEAK” EQUIPMENT der separate, private operations, leadef of ay Movement, the propon- taught that healthy, beautiful | the presidential vote of millions of American womeh.| Not even the zichest raliroad ean | operate profitab! and with reason. able rates if it has to mupply tteeif Might Be Worse with rolling stock equipment capa bie of taking care of its peak lond. | frankly and cleanly. The great commodities of the! country are produced and consumed Next time you draw @ check to aend to the collec: |sensonabiy and sectionally, There New Worries tor of internal revenue for income tax, don't cuss;/are times when much equipment of || think of being a Frenchman, and be happy. each road lies idie and there are q sae ge yr tax is three times the United | other neasons when all its equipment tates levy. An official estimate of taxes due from/|falls far short of the requirements | | Doctors now think imperfect teeth are a chief) 4. man with an income equivalent to $50,000, or| of traffic. if: 5% of many ailments. It has come to aeeag | 280:000 france, in $21,823. ‘This is anvuming the nor-| If the government ts to ald the raft | as dangerous to have teeth as once it seem: mal rate of exchange of 5.20 franca to the dollar.|roads in obtaining 200,000,000 worth | have an appendix. If the rate be assumed to be 12 franca to the dollar | of new locomotives and cars, it would | | Each year those who worry have something | ine present rate at depreciated exchange—al|seem to me that the interest of the! to worry about. As each new case for concert | prenchman would have to have 600,000 francs income,| public and of the roads would best | to notice the previous worries are forgotten. | +, equal $50,000 Income in the U. & A. At this|be served by having this additional, | year, it was thought dangerous to eat oysters. rate, the Frenchman will pay this year $30,233 in-|fovernment-supplied equipment han gave one typhoid. Maybe they do yet. But! pome tax to his government. died as a unit so that it may be! Worry about it. The supposed menace of ripe) «The assumption is made that this’ Frenchman|Mmobilized in those nections of the | is a more fashionable worry in 1920. fs married, living with his wife, and has three minor|COUNtry where seasonal :novernents | Man is encompassed by perils children, and that his income is equally divided| Of freight are on. | | Tet him but look at @ street car conductor, and | between professional or business direct income and| This does not neceasarity mean income from investments. ‘ government ownership or govern: | The citizen of the United States of the same statua,|™ent operation. It means handling || Pays to the federal government on the same income|‘"# government-supplied equipment { $6,407 tax | Just as the Pulfman cars are handled The Frenchman whose tncome {a 60,000 franca! SURPLUS PULLMANS will pay this year a mailer income tax than in 1919.| MOBI SECTIONALLY The man whose income is 260,000 franca pays 60| The surplus Pullmans are mobil. | trip — get ng pai ae o real per cent more income tax, while if he has an in-|ized sectionally and seasonally to thors tiling bis thu’ wille cating gat | come of €00,000 franca he will pay 250 per cent more| meet extraordinary traMc Having | | “ood , nent year thea ote France in reducing the tax|mot it, they are hurried away to meet | | - on the smaller incomes and increasing it on tho|the next emergency. It in just as ‘The een tase te = yp a larger incomes. possible to handle this proposed new France believes that taxation should he based supply of rolling stock and motive Most cautious and fearing. Surely, he won't | ability to pay. It is a pity that U. & possi power in that way ag it is to handle more often! men do not read the French news and get the sug-| the Pullmans that way. | gestion that it gives. A whole lot of people in the| Separate operation of the raftroada| Blaine Davis, released from the King coun-| V: %. 4. believe that ability to pay might profitably |! Private hands utterly broke down || thought about openly, Get Goodyear Value In Tires for Small Cars Don’t be misled by very cheaply’ priced tires, for tire economy is not a matter of what tires cost originally but of what tire service costs in the. end. | Man sits down to eat. A fly may have put its foot in his food. His glass of water is full of in- Wisible wriggiers, one of which may cause his death. | "A dog may bite him in the leg. Or a brick may Vali off a roof, and hit him on the head. He may True Goodyear mileage and economy are built into Goodyear Tires, of the 30 x 3-, 30 x 3% and 31x 4-inch sizes, in the world’s largest tire factory devoted to these sizes. jail Monday that he might file his candi-| °° ™4* ‘° basis of U. 8. taxation, too. when the strain of war was thrown || cy for Snohomish county sheriff, is a brave | Foncead: ‘executive Arado "oat It’s far easier to 7 quietly in jail The woman hater now risgs to remark that|*tter another, unsuccesatully, to meet If you own a Ford, Chevrolet, Dort, @ convicted bodtlegger than weather a po-| all of Russia’s troubles can be traced to the betes cilen ema Actos eed ot| Maxwell or other car taking one of thesesizes, youcan equip it with Good- ear Tires at.your nearest Service tation. . Go there for the exceptional value in thesetiresmadepossiblebyGoodyear’s resources, experience and demon- strated expertness in tire manufacture, eal campaign. “she” in Bolshevist. TMS i LAN D oo ETHICAL DENTISTS 10-, 20-, 40-A Tracts Good quality of soil. Located convenient to Pacific Highway. Sixteen to twenty miles north of Seattle. Price $65 to $95 Per Acre And you will do more towards preserving your health than all the famous health re- sorts in the country. If you care to investigate you will be sur- at the great number of ailments all caused by one or more “sick” teeth. All work done by specialists who are part WEST 30x 3% Goodyear Double-Cure Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost no more than thi Fabric, All-Weather Tread. $2332 you are asked to pay for tubes of less merit—why Ieee P casings when euch sure protection is available? Fabric Anak Teed eon 2152 sons} aise in Waterproof bag anno $430 DR. J. BR. BINYON Free Examination WHEELER BEST $2.60 G.asses ETATOOUAUNUUNUQUQUQAQUULLIUATUUUOOL EOLA owners of the business, on Earth SROOND AND MARION we en i Mo tow , optiont tpnemesiiipiibenghimeecnniioemaans orthwe grind lenses from. start to. finish, ASK FOR and GET ELLIOTT 4357 fod we are the only one in ] SKATTLE—ON @INST AVK, eee te itn |S POrLICK § Capers Te |S The Original BINYON OPTICAL co,| _Malted Milk ¥, 1116 FIRST AVE. for and Invalides J Between sa and Semcem, _ [Avoid Imitations and Substitutes

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