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WE GEOGRAPHIC PUZZLE THE SEATTLE OEMS Ghosts of 1315 Arising | ¢40r your STAR NESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1922. | LEARN A WORD EVERY DAY U sez ~ SIL +(EyE-® +T= by The Mtar Pudlianing Oe Phone Mata e600, The Seattle Sta 2 months, $1.60; @ montha § Outside of state, Be city, 60) Published Datty month Nington ont & month. Today's word is PROVOCATIVE. It's pronounced — provahk-a-tive | nt on the second #yliabie. | It means—likely to arouse tem-| per, ikely to cause @ quarrel, caus Tt i ; | Se eee | ing one to be provoked. STERLING | a It comes from—Latin “provo-| \_ D e Een oO care,” to call forth, VETTERDA Aviwe y » “ , r i $15, | Companjon word— provocation. MAY - +> NINE — N = MAINE. Year 1923 may be “destined to repeat something like the experiences of 1515, Ses nde Maceaia cetioemone: bo-| . si » MAINES * ne ; own in European history.” fore thinking is provocative of|s heart” than taxpayers, and not from the taxpayers. Bu ee Serre nareent Sener haere ait | Prom: Steqy/ and Orne Pomme: (ceerse B, Bevan: @ On) quarrels,” Our educational system does need,| let the taxpayers awake to what but a pains | this 20-10 measure means and not taking, persistent investigation. | fal) for it, or the new school code, When there in @ need for gener | either owity, let 1t come from the teachers,| GROANING TAXPAYER NO. 1 not only @ shaking up, gets this prophetic warning in the magazine published by the Royal Eco- le society of London. he prophet is Sir William Henry Beveridge, famous economist. WEALTH For Aline | BY JOYCE KILMER dependent upon the whim of pollt foal placegetters, all they'll get| they can put in ther eye! ro 2 " nye Wrom what old ballad, or from what rich frame ‘The state tax which now furnishes yl, 4 “ back as two years ago, he began predicting the possibility of “lean years” in $20 for each rehool child (which It xs On aa Was it from Chaucer's singing book you eame? will try to change to $30) makes eS SEs Zz 5 or 1926. ~ Or did Watteau's small brushes give you birth? up =p primi and between the in i= =§= z | terest of the permanent school fund, = =f= 4 he moves the date back a year and pojnts to “1923 as likely to be distinguished Nothing so exquisite as that slight hand —— at SLASEAWS, AA Che sum j= = 3 i ” i i Could Raphael or Leonardo trace, ;m™ lor wchool wor! @ coun- = 3 rain, cold and bad harvests in Western Europe and to bring high prices and ya Gola tha poets abe ie Yonsak te Ger iets aes aes ea Is 2 3 ‘The changing wonder of your lyric face. amount to $10 for each achool child j~ = 3 ¢ 7 sity in 1924.” This money can be used only for school expenses, wuch na salaries, | supplies, ete. ‘The school districts, | to the number of 2,500, must levy a ‘ax to buy land and bulid school houses, which may be 10 mills or, with the consent of the taxpayers, may be 20 mills, It i» this last torm of taxes that the framers of the 9010 measure object to so much, where they claim so much inequality exists, but as it | in not proposed to do away with this last form of taxation, where the benefit to the district taxpayer | will come in is not very apparent. cy ao eae I would ponsean a hort of lovely things, But T am poor and such joys may not be So God, who lifts the poor and humbles kings, Sent loveliness itself to dwell with me. hasn't been consulting a ouija board or clairvoyant. he analyzed wheat prices from the year 1500 onward. He found that wheat in cycles, the peaks recurring at intervals of 15 1-3 years. the big war that comes about every 50 years, when the people have saved th to finance it, wheat-price peaks are the result of crop shortage, generally weather. ; “Pape’s Cold Compound” Breaks Any Cold in a Few Hours stops nose running; relieves bead~ ache, dullness, feverishness, snees~ ter “Pape’s Cold Compound” age quickest, surest relief known, comnts only a few cents at drug stores. It acte without assistance. Tastes ‘The first dose opens clogged-up| nice. Contains no quinine. Insist Rostrils and air passages of head:/ upon Pape's.—-Advertisement. Letters to the Editor | Employers Dropping Japs Instant relief! Don't stay stuffed up! Quit blowing and wnuffiing! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” tak- en every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks any coid right up. Three New Yorkers who believed what a boot- legger told them were buried the other day. n ig a Editor The Star: An an American, I hope to eee em | The $23,000,000 ts the result of The new income tax blanks are shorter. So are 1 note with pleasure tn the day | ptoyern of Japanese in Seattle do 2019 {lat and does not inctude all r that layers of Japanese | the mn epent for sites an the people. partition Columb have dinchargea |(h0 same. ‘Fire the Jap O04 BI¥0/ 1.51 houses (thet comes out of — 3 them and are giving white men | the position to a white man, &# On¢ (the district tax) Five paydays hath September, April, July and | wetr pmcen. If some of the em-|of our first steps to prosperity, the| Many people think ft lewens tazx- December. ployers of Japanese tn our U. S| we are sorry to bave to take Our) ation to vote bonds for different cus from our neighbors across the line. Yours truly, Cc R HOOPER would follow sult there would not be as many idle men asking for as sistance on our streets as there are. Reply to Mr. Scholl instance in his findings stated that the members were to blame for the | condition ef things “owing to the genera! belief (in acta) that the load purpames, not realizing that all bonds are finalty paid out of the taxes; except the utility bonds Tt le generally known that the highest paid officials in the state are schoo! offictain? The president of the university gets $12,000, and the city superintendent of Seattle schools gets $10,000, And, if it had not been for the work of the tax One-third of what most of us know is untrue. During the fat years, Joseph and Pharaoh stored up surplus grain and sold it during the seven years of famine. speaking) upon the lapel of your coat this leather medal—only it isn't real leather, you understand —dhiy a sort of imitation leath- Editor The Star: An article appeafed tn your treme lot February 3 in answer to mine Farmers might ponder = this: Maybe a benevolent Providence has been swamping us with bumper crops, to enable us to stere the surplus for lean years im Europe or even in our own country. “And the famine was over all | the face of the earth: and Joseph er, but we feet you will be more comfortable in wearing the imi tation than the real thing! JOHN THE BAPTIST? NIT You were looked open by some of us insular voters as a big noise, We thought at first you were a sort of John the Baptist erying In the wilderness, and we appearing in your tseue of January 28, under caption “The Christian Science Controversy.” I would tke to correct @ statement made by the paid officer of the organization, Mr, Reholl, that “the directors of the Christian Setence board at Boston had been fully vindicated.” ‘The court at the commencement of the trial gave the Christian | Soience Publishing Society the right [to publish verbatim, in the Monitor, er was infallible, and that at her demine the clonk of tnfallibility fell Lon the board of directors (in acts)" a | condition Uhat the leader never ad | desired. It probabty never oceurred to the Joyal members of the Christian Scienes church that In order to be “loyal” Christian Scientists they |have broken the firet command |ment “Thou shalt have po other | setuetion counct! last eommer, there te little doubt that the superintend ent .of Seattle city schools would have been rained to $12,000. Our governor gets $4000 (%, the city mayor of Seattle, $7,500 ‘This being the case, it f a won- for where all this talk about our “poorly paid" teachers comes from. The only poorly paid teachers that can be located are the student . all the storehouses, and find you really are—with the tne evidence of court proceedings. | Gods but me* | iancnetens at tea Winner oo |sold unte the Exyptians; and the John the Raptist part left out. | No member was permitiad to.read| The chairman of the above board | much of the work of the bighiy : ] You are wp this fall for reelee | or even buy that daily paper by | stated that “Science and Heaith | paid instructors, for anywhere from 4 |famine waxed sore in the Innd . jeteted. . : U Egyp J order of the above board, so that | an he manual waa secondary; | $25 to $40 per month! Whieh dem- =| for ° S. lot t. And all the countries ton, we eon Do you think they are not correctly informed as | principle waa the main thing; mean. | onstrates the strange fact that well- ‘ | came into Egypt to Joseph for you'll make it? Maybe you will, | te the proceedings. jing that Christian Sctentiats have | paid teachers haven't “any more of : de Outlet « buy corm; becnuse thatthe dul If VashenMaury veters were The Monitor of January $1, 1922.| buried Christian Science in the | ———————— , 4 | - ¢ lothes of tts letter.” The HY : famine was sore in all yds. to decide your fate this fal—you | on 10, column % distinctly | erave clo! of | \MATECR ECONOMIST ia a iF bei would be weighed im the bal |states that (he presiding judge | manual neede to be revined im this Relieves Headache Final Cl e A The true wey to begin life ts net fe look eff upon it te sce what it offers, but to take a pood look at aclf, Pind eut what you are, how you ere made up, your capacitics ances and found wanting. Wast- ington is = young state, and » | would himwelf appoint the incoming | trustees, and in the Monitor of January 30, that t+ confirmed on | page 4, first column. The reason, the court explained, was to avoid collusion and quarrels tn the future; the accusation made by the board of directors against the publishing particular at least, and tbe organt A NtUe Musterola, rubbed en fore | mtion should be ashamed of it, and/ head and temples, will usually | which appears twice on pages 43\ drive away headacha A clean, jand’ 53, a» follows, tn substance, white ointment, made with ofl of | that if a member t# disobedient | mustard, Mustercle ts a natural they shall be “forever* disbarred | remedy with none of the evil after- from the church, so aa it now reads, | effects #o often caused by “inter it is not calculated to tnaptre tts | nal medicine.” sible.—Theodore T. Munger. November—and we wonder if | house, in several instances was not adherents with « true Christian) Get Musterole at your drug store. you can develop enough real | sustained by the court. The chairman | spirit, “forgive thy brother seventy | fe and 65c, jars and tubes; hospital team to the summit. We |0f the board of directors, J. V, | times even,” and any one who has | nize, $3, To Jones oe resch | Dittemore, waa forced out’ of the | closely followed the evidence of the | isc Positively End ta 1921 onty $35,000- md Poindect ha’e our doots! hoard, and that matter in still to| trial, “U® evident that that apirit| Better a Mostard Plaster fe} ve VY gs ai oindexter ome een be settled an to whether he le or in| Prevails, and it must prevail if the! exports dropped 000,000 to $140,000, m exports rose 099 to $155,000,000. in umports was Mindreaders awful things. (From the Vashon Island News- Record) Twe weeks ago—the Fnnglish- [not a member of that board. The) Teles of the manual are stricly car judge stated that “If the trial insted | tied out ) much longer it would be unimpor-| With reward to the trial the mem. “Te marriage a handicap?” asks tant whether there were any new | bere are in the same position an «| Thursday Night wew-ONLY ONE DAY MORE-@@ lob marked. man would say a fortnight—we © minister. In golf, yes |trustees needed or not,” owing to | jury would be who would be expect- realize ~ addressed let t on lthe cont of the trial and other aya | ¢d to pas on a trial without being rs |teraee the Necler vae ara Real “Hard Times’’ | tom ot bovestta to “reduce the puts | permitted to know anything of the| we —but they will be whirlwind days, featuring dl a df . j lishing house to an empty shell,” as | evidence, and is most tilogical. Re ee sensational values in high-grade shoes. now that you have each diy for Oscar |atated by the directors that they | apecttully yours, Seattle Housewives They’re broken lines, it’s true, but the big brown | Would ° MARY F. SEL! J. charged your prerogative, the A $20,000 ante and six would do. The master in the first LEN. Hi variety of styles insures a fit for every type game ts played, and you are each entitled to the judge's award, ‘The Campfire Girls to developing a large ve ecm ay Snort stone mansions in Petrograd were owned by Oscar Payor a few Te Senator Jones we take years ago. He was = multimil- : Pleasure in presenting, with the | jienaire, the leather tanning king a to be allowed to build [compliments of the 5,000 resi- of Russian ; trade or will we find [dents of Washon-Maury island, | Buropean goods crowd | the first . The bolsheviks seized his prop- Us out of this market also? Prize, Upon the lapel of erty and money. People of the United |700F coat we pin the blue rib- Payor arrives in Boston. have a tremendous | ben, for you haye not only hom worked his way across the At- | licity. and ark more people to send of energy, In a cen- | ored the people of this island by — jantic, jin their views and understanding of your veto against the lavish use glee. 9 oe = in the em | this complicated governmental situa- tbe Great stretch ot tor |7% or part Norwegian | tion. in seeking public of steamer Corona. The “30.10% question ts tmportant fies, but a large majority of the of foot and for every occasion. 1,250 Pairs Women’s Shoes Included fn this lot are Lairdr, Schober & Co, I. Miller & Sons, and other famous makes of Pumps, Oxfords and Slippere—ail at ONE-HALF regular prices, ¢ 600 Pairs Men’s Shoes Johnston @ Murphy, Nettleton, Bostonian, Forbush and other acknowledged peertess leaders in high and low, bal, Blucher and brogue styles—all at ONDHALF regular prices. Sale on Main Floor : ; , Groaning Taxpayer Again Editor The Star: when it comes to the dixtriete that | | “The Groaning Taxpayers” eem | wiit renily need help, and they are to have awakened from their eth arsy and decided to do nome groan- ing out loud where it will do the lmmost good. We certainly have to thank The Star for this fine pub- GIRLS! LEMONS WHITEN ROUGH vee 2b i from the mountains next Atlantic to the Pacific pronase To Miles Poindexter—the big to take better care of the poorer) amoothen the skin, Americans who think they have | and very little understood, and the CHAPPED HANDS the question is—how is | voters of the state of Washing- had hard luck during depression, |Dartien who are explaining tt are Second and Madi: St Onl: ee osiay: |ton commend you. You are en- should compare their lot with j not siving afl the facts to the en | Squeese the Juice or two semons into ee naupnnnreccrgieuges 4 ‘all the peoples of the | titled to this ribbon as a sort of — Payor's, | caneing frum 2010 to $0.10 would |® battle containing three ounces of | Positively No Exchanges, We are the best fitted to | “Distinguished Service” badge— 15 he discouraged? Ne. He | raise a very much larger sum of Orchard White, which any drug store | es the Pioneering in South |for you faced » stubborn enemy, washes the coal dust off his | Money, the answer was they did not stiles wall, Ga pear Wars Taene Swe can profit by this [2nd anlike the | children” of hands, announces he will begin Jone ‘T. No. & hows most con. |PiSt of harmless and delightful lem. nity we must comply | Epbralm, you didn't “turn your working at the bottom and “one | ciusively that ft will raise about (CU eiench lotion to soften and whiten Gebtain economic and po- | feeo tm the day of battle.” of these days may be an Amert- | $10,000,000 more. The framers of fomemule tomen eeen wne This reetiiions, Is orter to THE BOOBY PRIZE can. millionaire.” this measure claim that they wish | rior to glycerine and rose pono aan Yeu never can tell. Payer ts | ii. ite A very laudable natea bas Famous stage | gives instant relief. 25 years of succes: | first, and it is to be noticed t ball moose progressive of 1912~ only 32. And America is a young beauties use it to Dieach and bring all druggiste. Avoid substitutes 2: how do thone things work out? The |that soft, o! at we also extend a prize. It is man’s country, higher-ups will be taken care of a » ty iP ge as OE ae = pg oe ie Deyn Sak we fel Foe | vertisement, i pad a Shen @ There is no victory possible with- out humility and magnanimity, and no magnanimity or humility possi- ble without an ideal; and there is no one who has not heard the call in his own heart to put aside all |are entitled to this, above ail | Other senators in Washington, D. "pH |G. Not only do we take pleasure en Child’s Bowels with | in presenting this small token of lifornia. Fig Syrup” the expression of the people of ; ¢ evil habits, and to live @ brave, Vashow Maury island toward you, inate, truthful fe. — Thomas P) but we also pin (figuratively fyuence | AIVRIDGE MANN 1] Dear Fore: There is a pavement—Concrete—that does In February, it Ie plain, we've all got birthdays on the brain; for not develop bumps or ruts even under the | Washington and Lincoi o, were born this month, as we all heavi i it | w; and Dickens, I would like to say, made bis appearance yes lest traffic, bur is rigid, permanent, and |] terday sae ae has maintenance built into it. | e wasn't president or king, or any high and mighty thing; he {| maw't Diane a glowing name in poy statenwan's ball of tama, he Cities and towns throughout the country 1 only lived to ear the prize hat goe literary i lurry Mother! A teaspoonful of gp bet n sondern: eel ae ar ring oe Telit Tile akatt he ‘deer . is are paving with Concrete because af these Korma Fig Syrup” now will!) he stops to tell of all the things that lite in all ts phaaen bring: ne pwn ages Pray regen qualities— and because it is skid-proof, ou jean ne little bowels J jles, and dream. anc ou and ellis alike of joys anc i i ee enone, LiCe bowels | sm d dreams, and tears; and tells alike of joys and Pastes jack, White, clean, and comfortable to ride on. Tan and Ox-Blood Shoes. |, Playful child again. Kven a And that’s the reason I would give, to tell you why his novels en Cvaphadeae P engonanl hee live; while many books we see today will live awhile and pass pon way 7 hada nn yb 4d lb n others | away, hin tales remain ag fresh as youth, because he dared to te oe _ ™ "an rest easy because it never fails the truth phen . hagas oy “eh 4 Wo work all the sour bile and poisons For life is not atl ‘or life ot all golden joy, nor yet entirely base alloy; !t has ght out of the stomach and bowels ita bits of rain and sun, of ups dnd down for everyone; its bit of PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION hout griping or upwetting the love, its bit of woe, its bit of everything we know ; pm psp a. | And if existence wasn't so, we'd find it mighty dull and slo (the genuine “California Vig Syrup” night, for thus we learn the false and true—and that's the thing cf National ization to Improve and leh has directionn for babies that Dickens knew. ” Extend Us dren of all axes printed « ICY: Dilley Counpany of New York, Inc. Buffalo, N.Y. nes of Comcrete Mother, you must ” By Refuse any Offices tn 23 Other Cittes imitation.— | Girite, Tamm