The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 4, 1922, Page 6

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By mm and cool off. he good of the service.” doll rags and go home.” | i i tf ee Hyefi F at H i Hl i FE 4 Re [F ate Advertising is the modern mir- Bele worker, but it must be done iy and consistently. You ‘eannot stop in the middie of the Stream and expect to get across. I wonder if we were trying an having stolen $963,900, and if “Aida Connection with the theft were Proven as closely as the connection Of Benator Newberry is proven with the financial transactions here dnvolved, how long it would take a fury of 12 men to find the prison- €F @ particeps crimints in the trans- ection. | wonder if, instead of this Being $268,000, it had been $263 and the prisoner at the bar was a man f humble means, how long it would take a court or jury to find that individual guilty.—Ben. Reed {D) Mo. Bome people notice the days are j getting longer while others notice the nights are getting shorter. These days nobody ever finds more than @ nickel on the side- walk. Cattle growers want 20 per cent tariff on hides. And the consumer knows whose hide it will fall on. These advertised asbestos gloves Must be for home-brewers to wear while pouring a drink Editor The Star: Ma w 44 jest growed up thoughts.” Meagher, 1554 Li. 76th Bt Many more would be in : hd Y they had the face to the The Seattle @et of clty, Be par month: B months 4) tm the stat w 4 tor @ month In the hearings on the New and Cummins Alaska bills before the senate territories | pommittee the other day, Secretary of the Interior Fall said: “I made a statement to the president of the United States to this effect: That if it Was his policy to develop Alaska, then it was going to be necessary to co-ordinate the t ities of the different departments and bureaus in Alaska, If it was his policy to Alaska to remain as at present, I would like to know, because then I would my time and attention to something else and just let Alaska drift, as it is drift spectacle of a cabinet minister attempting to browbeat the president of the States and then bragging about it before a committee isn’t delectable, and Mr. would have been quite within his rights if he had invited Mr, Fall to go out- are the facts? The Cummins bill‘ authorizes the president, without any change a the law, to distribute the various governmental functions in Alaska, or re-distribute as may be deemed best for the service, and makes it mandatory on the sec- of the interior to operate a government steamship line from Seattle to Alaska ting with the new government railroad. This was the measure indorsed by all 5 ve friends of Alaska as the best one obtainable at present. But Secretary Fall and Chairman Harry New, of the senate committee, apparently want that kind of a bill. So Fall drew (he admits), and New introduced, a bill deliberately transfers the forests of Alaska, worth hundreds of millions, from le custody of the agricultural department to Mr. Fall's department, takes the 400 miles “government railroad dut of the president's hands and turns it over to Secretary Fall it power to lease to whomsoever he sees fit and at any price he may decide is “for And it is THIS measure that Mr. Fall takes in his hand when he goes before the it and says: “If you won't get behind me in what I want, I'll just throw down “Can a man make love in an airplane?” is an Indiana court question. He can't without help. Those bathing beauties, who left magazine cov- ers not long ago, are posing for 1922 calendars. , Only men who want to pay income tax are those who don’t have to. Henry Ford's friends call him “Hen” because THE SEATTL STAR (LETTERS To EDITOR Bad Curve on Elevated Line | | BAitor The Star Joollected from the debrin The elevated road which we have! 1 do not blame all motormen to pase overy every time we come to, Some of them turn off the power! or 0 from, the city, has a very| before they reach the point of dangerous curve near the Skinner | danger, & Eddy shipyards, and should have and others even better | hao that by applying their brake & ‘BLOW’ «ign, Which all motor | aiso men should be made to observe. ‘The public is cohtinually calling Why should passengers be sub-|for mafety first, Let's have it ap jected to the nerve racking expert! plied here before it's too | ence of fying around that curve at) All means of transporta haw 40 miles an hour, when with a curve | @ certain pount of risk, but why | of & much larger radius on the! should it be taken unnec rilyt| atreet level they only about baif|/1 would like to see some m | speed? the West Seattle residents” give | Jf an accident should ever happen | thetr view on thin subject. Yours there, the combined morgues of (he! for safety now and at ai) times, city of Seattle might not be large J, RUTTER, his plans hatch. Russia Coming Back Roisheviem admits ita failure. ‘The world’s greatest experiment in communism has been wrecked en the false economic theory that system, The Russian working: men have proved that modera men may be driven to extremes of destructive despair if progress is denied them. There will be bet- ter treatment of laber thraeut the world because ef the belshevik terror. The ease and ananimity that have marked the success of the counterrevolution indicate self- control and = basle fund of com mon sense in Russia, For » time, Kiussia will be weak and sore Bat, » giant's power lies dormant there, The period ef convales cence may well surprise the all talents are equal and that men _ will work fer nothing as ardently as for gain. ‘The boisheviki have been ériven by starvation to be their own counter revolutionists, Bolsheviam goes; but the bolsheviki remain fo retrace their steps back to a daily wage and the rights of pri vate property, under Lenin's leadership. That is to say, there will hardly be » monarchist revo evernmnent Rus (After applause) Mr. Chairman, — i ge Pred I werlcome this hilarious, almost sia's small bedy of intellectuals. gojsterous, But somewhat tardy The workingmen have resolved to recoynition. 1 take i, however, that it is w6t altogether on account of ™y personal appearance. My oreat-grandfather was a captain. It 9 @ tradition in owr family that Capt. Tom White waa the home- Nest man in the continental army. It i even said that whenever Washington would look at him he would become #0 angry that he come of benefit to mankind. The wowld wont to po out and Nok the French revolution piled horror on Uritish—Ftep. White (R) Kana. horror, but gave liberty to Con ns Ee a tinental Europe. The Russian rev- The Katewdoshashin Kabushihe 4 Kaisha is a Japanese movie trust, Semen WE solic sately et the: ay wayte thas why they twonted eruelties of the modern industrial find their way to safety under their own lenders, ‘This self-confidence, even in de feat, is a good augury for the fatare. It would be a blow to the human spirit if out of Russia's dire troubles, nothing were to to fight. msi ) or your BY EUGENE FIELD The Iittle toy dog is covered with dust, But sturdy and staunch he stands And the little toy soldier is red with rust, And his musket moulds in his hands Time was when the little toy dog was new, And the soldier was passing fair; And that was the time when our Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put ther there. “Now, don't you go till I come,” he raid, “And don't you make any nolse! So, toddling off to his trundie-bed, He dreamt of the pretty toys And, as he was dreaming, an angel song Awakenéd our Little Boy Hine Ob! the years are many, the years are long, But the little toy friends are true! Ay, faithful to Little Boy Bine they stand, ach in the same old place. & the touch of a little The smile of a little fa And they wonder, as walting the long years thru In the dust of that little chair, What has become of our Little Boy Blue Since he kissed them and put them there. and, GEER S ARSwERS | LOG ~G+N + DONKEY — KEY = LONDON enough to accommodate the dead 6019 47th OW. Bank “Blocs” and Blocks Raiter The Star ‘The bankers’ bloc was loyal to the Raches’ Review,” published by &] banks: that bloc han been on the Job Wail st. banking house, prints a long | ever wince, It ia time for an indus bw Seeieas 8 uave cupeerl te lag {trial bloc to get fair play for produc. inlation to encourage and protect the | Bp Bia: cares try of agriculture that haw been|,, VUTing Wilson's first administra robbed of billions thru the proceas |!" the federal reserve act was pre- of defiation, jpared by a representative of the bankers had better Jook | D&AKs not & member of congrens. Wall bankers’ bioe worked it thru mole gg oct gy ape Moye, Aer? practically without dotting what & plain to every wideawake or ere “t," by whieh that Wall r croming @ “t, 5 ‘ |than three billions, trebling their than 50 years in operatio: constant | 1 out int ‘oF other cam and faithful to the interests of the | @PMAl without Interest , } banka. cont ‘of When congress provided a cur. feney for trade and commerce by | issuing U. 8. treasury notes directly to the treasury of the government, it Was paid out at par, mving) in| faxation &# many dollars as were inw ued. The bank bloe was organized and wheedied congress into providing a currency of bank notes instead of | treasury notes, made them good and gave them to the banks on eaxy con ditions, without interest for 60 years, with the privilege of another 66 (many have started on their second term of 60 years). The ernment | fot nothing. The banks paid their | nine tenths of their operating capital, notes out at par, loaned them to/and could not see that the people agricultural and business enterprises | were piling up profits for the banks at toppoteh rates. The government |and buliding their palatial blocks on needed ali that money and had to| the best corners in all our cities, A have it, and finally got it by taxa-|year of thinking and looking facts on, The money would have been | squarely in the face makes it as plain aa good for business bad the govern. laa the sun of & Clear day, yet it has ment first used i instead of the | euch a shady look as to give one the banka shivers, PROGRESSIVE, pensation than the mere paper and printing ‘That was a jot of money, and the government needed every dollar of it, but the bankers wanted it (did not need 10, The bank bloc was faithful to the banks instead of the people Many fine bank blocks have since been built in our big cities with the free federal reserve bank notes, 1 have been a farmer for 60 year Had t work s hard—long days, early and late, just like my neigh bore—that I was so weary I could Ot ate & bankers’ bioo in congresy and did not discover or realize how the people furnished the banks with Just Durn Fool Questions Editor The Star: | Why is it that there are as many Why i ft that so many people | different factions in the inbor move ment as there are fleaa on a dog's who are busy #aving the world often " back—all of them knocking each neglect to “eave” thelr own families, | cenployes and walghvers? |other and none of them getting any: wapaper I Why te it that a Why t* it that the average man tan the fame of hate between twolang woman is t6o lagy to ait down nations, musing the saughter of and write their congressman and millions of ordinary citizens on both | tel him where to “head in at” if he hen in reality the diplomats | qoom't vote for or against a certain and statesmen are the ones guIY | wit The big corporations aren't too of the dirty work? |inay to neglect writing or to send Why i it that the mayor wants | personal representatives to congress to spend $10,000 to freshen the wa- | They're always looking after THELR ters of Green lake when the money | best interesia, which ia more than could be spent in such & way as to|the American citizen ever bothers give employment for « large number | to da, JRSS1B P. MOSIER, of men? 1224 6th Ava APetter from AIWVRIDGE MANN. Postinaster, Seattle: Dear Bir-You used to yell and gush about the awful Christmas rush; your ery “Mill Barly,” more or les wan like an urgent SO. 8 And # we heard your plaintive shout, of did our best to help you out, Tt seems to me they need to say, th “turn about te proper play”; so, pardon me, if I conclude, you failed to show your grath tude, for never were you beard to state, “Do all your Christmas billing later With all the howling you can do shout the public helping you, you skin u* out of all the cheer in starting Out a brand-new year, and give us all the nervous chilie by filling up the mall with bills. For it would moke an angel qimil to take a slant at Tuesday's mail; It takes the joy of life away when all our letters seem to say, with bitter, diabolic wit, “A Happy New Year—Piease Remit.” So while you make @ fuss about our spretding Curietmas mail- Ing out, you ought to give the aftermath in doses like a homeo. path, and scatter out the bills, we'll say, from February unt May ‘This year there's nothing left to do except to try te mee ft thru: but next year we will change a bil, and get a fifty-fifty eplit—it you deliver bills in bales, then heaven help the Christmas mails! CASCARETS 10¢ For Constipated Bowels—Bilious Liver The nicest catharticlaxative to|tonight will empty your bowels com physic your bowela when you have | pletely by morning and you will feel splendid, “They work while you sleep.” Cascarets never stir you up or gripe like Salts, Pills, Calomel, Gour MemacB © lee Oil, and they cost is candy-like Casear One of twola box. Children } Headache Colds Dizziness Billourness Indigestion NG SECOND TERM Knights of Columbus Evening School MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1922 Free Scholarships to Ex-Service Men and Women Moderate Tuition Fees Charged Non-Service Students COURSES OFFERED: Arithmetic Typewriting Accounting Calculator Bookkeeping Radio Telegraphy Commercial Art Penmanship Business English Teleg Public Speaking Auto Mechanies Salesmanship jementary Courses Mechanical Gregg's Shorthand—Jearnaiiaa ENROLL NOW—OFFICE OPEN FROM 1 TO 16 P. M. FOR INFORMATION WRITE, CALL OR TELEPHONE 916 East Marion St. Phone East 8556 ‘The Reward of Efficiency Is Immediate #Y AMATE According ing men of th compete in with the Kuropeans The only way the Ameriean (Starts on Page One) ! of ite length wa ard of living can be maln- | ined he wae only able to secure @| ruta on the in by high production lhaif-rate man—Voeper by name, @|came in sight § one for food. pin the price of one in his home, invent the pri and support his flivver with the sixth, If he makes but two muita, he keeps one, trades the other for food, and goes without the other things. dard of living uments for yen, for the t bor, It is p produce in this Ountry in a wo hour day, as © Bteph dean of busine at the Universit one Of the highest scone thoritifs in the Went suite of clothes in a month, he can keep one of them. UR ECONOMIST | 1, Miller, ministration ft Washington, pio Au work got to production actual if a tailor makes | ghiftyeyed youth from one of the) driver—a man placer mines, farther down toward| of autortages, the wettlements. Up to the time that he heard the | iow faroft sound of their nutomobile struggling up the jong bill, he had] made no mental pie ployers, He rather hoped that Mr. | usw Kenly Lounsbury ing man—would represent the usual | automobile type of middle-aged American with trade one for pleasure, up beside the of one of them in thin aight | type, of medium ur who o| during | months, on the jong river-road be next instant the car drew hote TO 4 man of citien there would ure of him em-|have been nothing particularly um uncle of the mins} man and girl in the tonneau of The man was a familiar simply two rated 4 the summer —_ of & well-groomed, nize, precive, hie whom he had previourly dealt—cold-| outing clothes just @ trifle garish; 5 High production and high stan. |nerved, likable business men that|the girl trim and sweettaced, and ¢ go hand in hand. came for recreation on the caribou stylish from the top of her head h Every one of us has heard ar | trails, Virginia Tremont would of| the soles of her expensive little boots, ® the six, tha four, | course be a new type, but he felt no| But no moment of Bill's life had t wohour day of lw in| interest in her, But aw helever been fraught with « greater a buble that we could | waited at the door of the hotel he| wonder. None had ever such a quab a began to be aware of a curious em /ity of the n ulous, None hag a much aa the Rus eltement, 4 sense of grave and por | ever gone #0 deep. . uv We could work |tentous developments. He did net) He had not known many womem, Yr ian consumes hours and French peasant, but most of ua four can't live aa ing eight or ten hours. The question of make the work go comes up in times of depression, such as the present, All over the country men are “tant,” an they say; making jobs * in reality they Up, leasening production, and re ducing the standard of living. Fora Ainciple of efficiency that indus. try hax ever known. Henry the efficiency his machines are turned out at a price that enables 5,000,000 men to own one. Also this efficiency pays each of hin employes nearly twice the money they could get from other indus If all workers as. Ford's employes are, every | WARNING! | Unless you see the name ‘‘Bayer’’ on tablets, you are not | getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years — live like feel in the least self-conscious. But he did know a suddenly awakened the this ¢ we want lo work | clear to these northern reaime to find | of the wives of ¢ her lover. | ~—women The car was in evident difficultien, | keepers, It was the end of the road: in fact the old highway for the last three person in the U. &. could drive a ear, could own a fine home, could spend & month each year travel. Ing, could have the best of clothes and give their children the beat of educations. While if al industry was cursed With the inefficiency found in some of our government offices we would be living on the same Plane as the Russians at this ume. 1 will venture to catimate that if flivvers were built In congress they would cost more than a mil- Hon & re each. | ee | whieh lived. they are keeping prices up with, is the greatest dernens, ecaune of to hom the eyes in hin organization scorn. She aa efficient and proved safe by millions for Colds Toothache Headache Neuritis Neuralgia Lumbago Aapirin io (he trade mart of Bayer Manufacture of Momoaseticacidester of Salicylicacié A Strong Financial Statement Report of Financial Condition at Close of Business December. 31, 1921: RESOURCES Loans and discounts . Overdrafts ‘i U, 8. Bonds to Secure Circulation. Bonds, Seourities, ete + $10,454,883.09 4,451,697.92 Furniture and, Fixtures. 45,000.00 Real Estate ...... ‘ 249,999.00 Cash and Exchange 6,618,510.07 Redemption Fund v. § 2,500.00 Customers’ Liability and Acceptances 238,358.07 $21,017,182.74 LIABILITIES Capital Stock Surplus Fund ...... 400,000.00 Undivided Profits (Net) + 224,007.09 Reserve for Taxes, Interest and Depreciation Accounts .. Circulating Notes Redixcounts Federal Reserve DEPOSITS 1,600,000.00 133,802.41 47,700.00 NONE 18,611,913.24 rk man of the forests had seen Indian squaws in plenty, interest in this girl who would come| stolid and fat, he had known a few neatly clad and perhaps @ litte saddened and crushed by the, | Very remorselessness of this land if. been no girls in Bradieyburg to grow no schoolday sweetheartgg He had known the dark and de never a wweetheart’s kins. Hig mother was now but a memory; tem loveliness, personal bea: had been wi without his bourne. And he at Virginia Tremont as 4 man look at & celestial light. If the girl could have seen the wwift flood of worship that flowed into his face, she would have felt no oft the cities, caste twd hardened her as far as it could (Turn to Page 11, Column 1) iy Always say “*Bayer’”’? when you buy Aspirin. Rheumatism Pain! Pain Accept only ‘*Bayer’’ package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablete—Alse bottles of 24 and 100—All druggists. He Bradieyburg mene uEN, g00d house But there bad olate =a Steet e @2be car vrense + LS WM FFAS FER oe 4288SyRty

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