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_ PAGE 6 The — Seattle Star Ry mall, owt of otty, Ste per month: * < ba Ot Th) year + Basin ¢ Washington Me per month $458 for ¢ or 89.00. per Year, By cation, city, de per week | Enterprise — Assootation and United Presse Setvice by The Star Publish Phone Main #04. How About the Other Institutions? OVERNOR HART, it is reported, has consented amendments that will retain for the University |, Washington and the State College at Pullman some degr !}of independence in the selection of faculty members and in the Yonstruction of buildings. How about the other state institutions? Have they been also protected? The university and the state college are rather influen- tial. Dare we say they have able lobbyists at Olympia who have not incurred the ill will of the house members like} the city’s lobbyists have? Well, no matter. They are} strong mnuygh to amend the governor's code to protect their) institutions. And rightly so. Still, how about the Bellingham normal, and the other norn in the state, and the other state schools? Are they to have no voice whatever, say, in the matter of buildings? Are we to leave all that to just one man? When we consider what an immense job and how much miscalculation occurred in the construction of the capitol building at Olympia, might it not be worth while to stop and consider the architecture of the code in this respect) a little more intelligently? , | to of Aquiring Horse Sense iring H S HE HOUSE OF REPR TATIV in Olympia is to be congratulated upon the common sense exhibited in the Haskell-Lewis contest. The usual thing in such cases is for the party machine to whip the members into line for a strictly partisan decision, This apparently was not the) e this time. | The Star does not know all of the facts in the case, nor all the law in the case. It does know, however, that Dave ; | Lewis received more votes than Mrs. Haskell in the dis- Now Mi give him a tip, trict where both were candidates. The electorate of the ee Star cities wip, |district had spoken. allie oe” To vitiate that vote, the legislature should have an ex-| KITT SAP lceptionally good reason. A mere technicality should not sdjtinadtee be sufficient, and if that is all Mrs, Haskell could present,| ~ oll Kite? soemee the decision of the house was well page “a | unlike charity, not only be! The remarkable thing, however, is not that the ‘house Meee asttcteene & hang de acted justly, but that it acted sensibly. For once, it ap- how to blow off own! parently saw how foolish it would be to oust a farmer- llaborite on a mere technicality, when by leaving him in| the Kouse, he is rendered far more helpless to promote his propaganda than by expelling him, From a purely politi-| milk comes from cal standpoint, the contest was a blunder, and it is truly but you ought to amazing that, having initiated a blunder, the republicans) brew. I guess it comes from) q * " Tae ‘encion, 7h ee didn't continue it. o | Baitor Home Brew: I notice a on the society page: “Clubs Women.” Please send me ane my wife. P — x ORD FROM JOSH WISE: things gen'rally come siow: | f them th't wait - * was a young mayor named Hugh, the street cars, he made quite “Home his . SOME Home Brew T KICK ney conten taste my Part Owners HE Standard Oil company. of New Jersey offers stock) to its employes at unusually attractive terms. Frankly, | . O. makes it plain that the offer is not a matter of char- “ee '¢ ¥ WHEN HF HAS GUN Yess a mighty man is he. ith large and sinewy arms. ™ brave enough to frighten kids And even women he CT A Standard Oi! wants employe-stockholders because it hopes | Ghaganaim for a closer interest in employes’ minds when they are part) This according to the new light seen by captains of industry, GOOD BUSINESS. It tends toward a “new real- ization of the common aims and interdependence of capita! and labor.” Those are words Standard Oil itself uses in making the offer. Once there was a time when the employer wanted nothing less than that his employes « uld have a voice in the busi- ness. That was along about the time ‘vhen the public could be damned. . Modern industry damns not the public, the ;;consumer ; nor does it ignore the workers, the producers, — 1] There are those radical labor leaders’ who belittle this effort to make employes part owners in industry. They insist that it is but a crumb, intended to head off public Pimtroduced. We're for it. Hip |OWnership, and, being extremists, they are not satisfied with help some of the feliers to| anything but the entire loaf. However, there are many sangeng should pour freely.| persons, including a are en ae of gat Se sap who, Admiral believing that a two-year-old calf cannot be made in a min- pode enfecstey te state ite, think it advisable to make a success of part-ownersltup it saying Germany won the battle ‘ Jutland. What of it, even i¢ «| before attempting a still larger load. true? Prussia won the Franco Clouds in the North B war, too, didn't she? E’RE threatened with two forms of ugliness from } ‘There are a lot of birds around | who are shouting | hoarse for a chance copkifier, who into their pockets immy O'Brien and | evens and Angelin. eee ‘A BM to abolish hip pockets may eee a | Misdirected energy—Appointing a Taamecrat to office and sending his Bame to the senate for confirmation. h : ; eee | Canada, one of which we must meet with gasoline, ag ost the fur auction tn New! Paris green and general ferocity and the other with kind is week were from 30 to 70| .. ‘ re! e ow ‘ latht below thoes of the last|Wores that never die and all the shrewdness of Yankee © Previous auction, held in August. - i¢| Statecraft. 5 P EF they go much lower the burglars} The Canadian entomologists solemnly proclaim that the ae |western part of the dominion is pregnant as never before ae |with embryo grasshoppers which will surely hop across the| MARRIED OR i o. * Northw “Wanted—Discarded boundary line, in May and June, and make our Northwest- eat, suitable for making coat for|}ern farms look like African deserts. — ee ead irl—Mott (N. D) Ploneer-| Also, Canadian farmers are studying our proposition to eee itr g board controtier of eggs and such, and they ‘ve about concluded that it’s a good The shippin, 2 ;. 4 So they’re.organizing to demand high reprisal duties Me Boston district bought $240,000 | thing. More clothing than the district need-| oy ; ye . rycen ot or imports from us. 4 ey tor $70 005, nig term, £0" | $700,000,000 worth of business with those Canadians! x ‘| Grasshoppers and reprisal tariffs! It’s enough to brétd Dwi trF to sell it back to the govern-| Ps A Ment some day for $240 ben't| nightmare for our new administration and congress. “forget to pay your income tax. | ? aie Ernest Thompson-Beton says morals have no relation to dress. Conse- at all and still be straight-laced, _ Some pu yppreanig po ag has | quently @ person may not be laced You drink.” Most men do Think twice. Their first the PWhere can I get a drink?” And their second thought @Where can I get another?” . . 4 A Dallas man has 000 for bread Yd better let wel oe before T Harding has ordered two dress suits. Our shirt-sleeve diplomats will cht I8| » ow where to borrow an extra outfit when they're intited out, is, | Yee ‘ An immigrant 4s Hike an egg—the exterior gives no hint es to how he'll mid in the great American omelet, . / ued a widow | aa of promise. What's in a name? enough alone. | Cramp shipyards strike, . | ‘The fact remains, that the modern| Anti-British feeling ts not necessarily indicated by the fact that Wash- iiss isn’t as bad as she's painted. ‘ington hotels are Dublin their rates for inauguration week. What’s the Matter With Business? BY DR. WILLIAM E. BARTON 1 heard Roger Babson today in a talk to business | in God’s rating: and if he ts honest, Men. 1 heard him a year ago. Then he was a pessl | him nor let him fall” Stop canceling orders. Be mist; today he talked | honest and square, There is a good, solid pon Aor gy under busine the sooner we strike it, the sooner “We a we shall begin to build up. But as I tpld you a yea ainnea igo to stop building on the sand, I tell you now inflation attention to the upper stories of your structure you can and build on the solid foundation of character.” help it. Things are go prophets used do it much Yhe} ing drop. Today he When Jerusalem got gay, the prophets maid, We have two or around taking the joy out of life, telling three stern years ahead | ut they their money for that of us, and there is no as not bread a their labor for that which value in‘ cutting off the visty nen when the squeeze came, as it dog's tail an inch ¢ came » every few years but the func th those old prophets became conditions of | optim | Ame rican business are “You have two or three hard years ahead, but the sound; the real wealth | fundamental are sound. Trust God, be of the country is in| sauare, and make r permanent investments, both creasing; we have ‘ot Fj ” . financial and spiritual idleness than a ago; are pay When people expressed doubt or despatr, the proph eae idleness, | ets said, shall eat this year that which groweth me tee time to | Of Itself, and in the second year that which spring eth of the same, but in the third year, pew ye and _E. N practice virtues W. E. BARTO: rude and right.| Teap. Meantime, be honest and faithful; for the fundamenta 6 of business are sound.” @oumners. As soon as fifty-one per cent of the people | @f America do that, the tide will turn, Meantime Babson says, “I am not @ preacher, but a cold-| the underlying conditions are hopeful.” blooded statistician.” He said, “The real basis of business is not cash nor but character. If you have @ man on your who is finding it hard to pay, don't judge him @lone by Dunn and Bradstreet; find bow he stands Charles Fury was chosen @s conciliator tm the s do not crowd like an ear he in the n period do not buy said, last of it ago The to in to were alwaye people t were spending which w did not time; mental 8 since, conditions more year we leas ‘Ye the homely conditio But I notice some similarities in the messages to day and in the Jong ago. The basis of business then and now ts character; the sooner we all learn it the better, lity, nor that S. O. thus seeks to even up inadequate salaries. |* | | |rescue our farmers by high duties on grain, cattle, butter, |) And, O Lord! we do something like || || A Getahate Lai bottom THE | BUT DID YOU KNOW— that Great Britain's premier takes great pride in bis talent as a singer—partioularly of Welsh songs? The first price he ever won in his life was won in a Welsh singing contest, YOUR INCOME TAX When, How, What to Pay AM B. NICHOL of Internal Revense of persons whose in- in reasong of the exemptions were nor teable made the mistake lngt year of failing to file an income ax return, altho one was due. For! this they were assessed a sominal fine of from $5 to $10. The of internal revenue this year in emphasizing the fact that the requirements to fle an tocome tax return are be na per: | son's marital and amount of| or her net income for the year Sin persons with net in| « of $1,000 or more, and mar-| ried persons with net incomes of § 000 or more, must file a return re “8 of whether their inpomes are ble. After determining the amount of his exemptions the taxpayer In order » make the correct return must a» ertalft carefully his grow and net noome for the year. Net Income Ww gross Income leas ertain epecified deductions which in come by solely hie ude expenditures in the for personal taxes, lonmes, contribu tions, interest and bad debts Forms 1040 for reporting individ ual returns of income in excess of $500 are now available at offices of collectors of internal revenue and branch offices, Forms 1040A for reporting tndtvid- ual returns of income of $5,000, and lona, It is expected, wYl be ready for distribution within a few days. Letters to the Editor— PUT COPS IN PLAIN CLOTHES? Editor The Star: If I were Chief Searing, I would put all my men (excepting traffic) in plain clothea 1 would tell the masculine pubile to A Grafonola Helps to | | Keep Family Together Boys and girin enjoy muste. | They like the Illt of the waltz | and the rollicking jazz of the modern foxtrot | Come to and hear these New Records. No obligation to buy. | You will be sure to\ find a selec | tion suitable to every climes, age and mood. Just Snap Your Care. Fox-tr bia Saxophone Sex Goodness! Fox- wers.) Colum- Saxophone Sextet. Beantifal Walt, Ruddy.) Prince's Dance Orchestra. Pussy Willow Waltees. cau.) Prince's stra. Ani OM Hroadway Rone. (Fried and Spencer.) Peerless Male quar accom ment. My Little Geisha) (Jones.) Lucy Gates Soprano solo, Orches. ABS26 | accompaniment. 10-inch | Song from “Tales of) S¥m- mann.” phony $1.00 = Vlowers. Waltz Koyad Serbian Tambour itza Orchestra, Quiet Night, Waltz, Royal Serbian Tambouritza Orchestra, 074 ) 10-ineh } $1.00 Ana29 10-inch $1.00 Tired of Me. Tox-trot. (Lewis Ted d. and Van Alatyn Lowis are near our store t ever dreamed o: you have ne ynonraph, the wide range of price, from 822.00 A and: Montelius Music House v I SEATTLE STAR TODAY'S QUESTION Do you think you could handle a bandit? THOMAS ¥ White Bldg thing.” MKS. TENA L Apta: “Bure my big MALCOLM Garfield st Amawers RANCIS TUNT, “1 can handle SLUB, Ce DOUGLAB, 160% “If LT met him in the courtroom 1 think I could.” JON ROSS, N where ts he? MISS ZAD and Dayton at.: M. BROWN, N. 107th “It depends on who the bandit in.” INCLUDES SUSPENDERS, NO ‘The public in invited to cal) at the Republican office and see one of the hts in the state, We Kankakee beat equipped will be glad t (11.) Republic walk Ike would have at pDouBT pe » mhow you an policeman. with the criminal, Sedro-Woolley, Wash, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY $5 Down—$5 Month Apex, Hoover, Ohio and Western Electric Suction Carpet Cleaners. Agents Wi Lampe. Seattle Electrical Supply Company 509 Pine St Main 5331 BOX 258, emtinghoure Mazda Coffield Electric Washers Our Plant {s open ror in- spection at Visitors are 610 any) 206 Amon | w you 1 keep at my elbow.” | T4th ot: “Yea, | The cope least @ 60.50 break (From the Sacramento Star) ‘The renrations of a tree which etarted out by being one frult, became metamorphosed, in ite upper parts, into another, and then in turn e: back to the first, can be better imagined, as the saying goen, than described in citrus districts of California the and the orange ‘This is a common experi« tion i» that the jonto the lemon, Thin in not to may that ar @ straight orange, It doen't or the other, is observed, ‘Th from faltering in the grower used trees in which the rtock, When these trees ponsibly market lemons, but ors lemon can be grafted onto orange orange-lemon tree beara better oranges than In fact, no differe in the fruit, one way obtrusion of lemon in the trunk result He grow lemons, He lemon had been i attained sore conditions, Influenced bir wen, Bo he budded them over Quite a@ litt f thin t« ng done now in California, have been more profitable than lemons O14 hands in the citrus industry say that when the occarional hard froeae comes that “murder outs.” They say that the orange with some intervention of lemon is usu the r hit lans tarted out to dedin on, may, growth, some connider ation to whieh trees were not “9 Recently oranges High Blood Pressure and Rheumatism Succumb to Human Bake Mrs. Mary White, Age 69 | Years, Resident of Burien City, Gives Statement and Accompanying Photo of Herself for Publication in Seattle Star. Sufferer, No Matter How Old, Should Be Told of Dr. Loughney’s Wonderful Bake Oven Treatment. Ter statemept follows: | O14 folks, as well as the young | should know they can very soon be at |ease from their 4 lat Dr. Loughoey’s Bake Oven Sant |tarium, in Kirkland, | I went there with the heart bowed down, feeling discouraged from spending money and doctoring here and there, without relief, I wa a badly crippled condition, just full of ymatiom, mus aching joints stiff painful, dropsical | swelling my knees, very jhieh blood pressure, 226 (two hun dred and twenty-five). Between the [bakes and eating as Dr. Loughney prescribed my blood prensure is re duced to 150, | It’ a pleasant treatment and more leffective than anyone's best wisher joould expect. I feel entirely wel am real active, my friends are all rprised at how well I can step| MRS, MARY WHIT ¢ Burien City and above to may know it is not @ severe treat ment. Oh, it's just fine. Mont sincerely, MAS. MARY WHITE, Burien City. NOTE—Take ferry at mark to Kirkland, Wash, a Red 622 Dr. Loughney's hours at his Kirk and auto will meet you. |~no or stiffness The tarium is the most cory and home Chronic like place I was ever at. All of \dred invalid cases expecially solicit the patients are ly happy,/ed. Lady nu * in attendance, |feel right at home and have noth Seattle Office F Dr. Loug’ jing but praise for Dr. Loughney and|ney can be his nurees 4 all should eagerly from $ a m. to 12:30 p. write and advise their ailing friends | Hotel Congress, corner Fourth Ave and relatives to come right to the|and Marion St, Seattle, Wash. minitarium and be treated. Ho IT am 69 years old. so the aged /taking diagnosis of your case pain rant m. @aily, Sundays included. neuritis and kin lp arthri urs h sour Florida | Madison | 4 walk j three blocks to the right or phone | around and do my housework again |land Sanitarium are 1 p. m to 8 “mn personally daily | © Dr. Loughney make a pains- HEAVEN “Tleaven waite uheadm G14 T hear you 0, friend of mine, pray don’t, Tho heaven may wait, yet our So let us me “DM © heaven today, ND VANCE COOKE. |NEW GOSSI | FOR NEIGHBORS aise The two neighbors met on the steps un neighbors oftimes do. “Why tm it, Mrs, Black, that your three young nons always look #o nice even whem the playing, while I never seem to be able to keep my one boy wall dressed? He goes right through his clothes and I never have enough | ready cash to buy him another suit” The mother of three boys smiled proudly my boys de look nice and I alway y ther by wet their clothes at for therm in easy im ir suite are geod | looking and strong and the prices re markably low in spite of the easy payment plan. And best of all there \are two pairs of pants with each suit lho that they each keep one pair for school and one pair to play in. Their | dad gets all bin clothes at their storm too. They also have a big assortment of women's apparel. I can’t begin to tell you how much farther the fagnily budget goes since we buy our clothes in this manner. ‘Their store is right in the shopping district, on Second Ave., between Madison and Spring, |207 Fualto Bidg., over the Pign Whist! re the staliments “Now I don't have to avoid | because of embarrassing skin | ble, or lie awake hours at night, mented by intense ‘itching. Resins Otmtument did it! After the fixst sp” | plication of this soothing . fett euch biemed relief In time the inflammation was and the itching stopped, rcuema is entirely gome. inol Soap as dtrected with it | have found Resinol Sheving |be the best on the mafket ons sbave” all times. welcomed. Technical Experts and Mechanics are at your command to assist or advise. Write for in- teresting ACE Booklet. coming summer. ities of the AC ACE headquarters; tell us how much you think it is worth. { we are making extremely liberal Trade-ins. fair we will accept your valuation and allow liberal credit terms on the APEX MOTOR CORPORATION Ypsilanti, Michigan, GENERAL DISTRIBUTORS CORPORATION Factory Distributors 1407-1413 “ELEVENTH AVENUE, SEATTLE 849 for ACE Demonstration. Ride in ACE SIX Before You Decide We have plans under way to make the ACE the most popular car in Washington the 1 The ACE is a car of wonderful merit; it is a real beauty on the road, but it needs advertising so that the public may know of its superior qualities. To secure the help of a number of experienced motorists in demonstrating the road qual- Drive your car up to If you are anything like Phone East ce.