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PAGE 8 The Seattle 4 Daily by The ' r Kote Star Publishing Co ain elation and Un fan Mianotroe New York officg It Is a Fat Docket at That Having enjoyed a nice vacation and shaken hands, for- mally, with President Coolidge, the United States su- preme court will now tackle a docket of 580 ¢ ses. These, say Washington dispatches, contain nothing of “outstand- ing importance.” Grab a handful of hair you hurt him; he will yell. and its departure isn't noticed. court docket, It has the one-l -time possibilities, and the clearing of it by that court should be noticed. While the docket’s tout ensemble doesn’t, perhaps, reg- from a fellow’s head and A hair at a time doesn’t hurt Thus with this supreme TH OARS REALLY ARE SEATTLE STAR NECESSARY MAY BE We BETTER TAKE HIM ALONG sy \ TUE I oc TOBER Soldiers for the Next War BY HERBERT QUICK for military ser yunt of physical dls In three weeks, It ts not surprise me unfit for mit it and thare of a of the world live po oa ms, RE Tobacco, eee Helpful Stimulant? So Smokers Say. Figures Disprove It. t help in me portion of « ho land with the taming and @ *Dectaney rage, pulation, “by preva Drage eaten pg the tea it {6 the | ister “outstanding importance,” it is made-up of issues up the like these: for the How much shall Chicago lower Lake Michigan thru her 4 : ys stare te imaied ‘ ns I lraimige canal? It is a matter of concern to every citi- y ) ¥ ne | Ds piatleliie Rave eee te ; # zen of the eat Lakes region, from Duluth to Ogdens- | such > f is not the fact ipl | Faas ee ae PEREDIT Shall Uncle Sam or the N. Y. Coffee & Sugar Exchange i Wb dicdarnemal dictate what coffee and sugar shall cost all of us? What jand me Men’s New Fall every woman wants to know. G Sigeloest tip supply of ox 1&2. Can a state define the quantity of liquor to be sold by 5 4 — me.F ‘ ntohaas os rt thing wt ‘5 Wr Hae “oh druggist This one is of terrible interest to doctors in | ( : i is ie : ays : ; 1 most states, ! Can telegraph and expr of damages they will pa Can railroads charge more for a short than for a long haul? Can a state put a tax on gasoline nding importance?” We say yes. We may not ed bald-headed” at one », but if the United y. oligarchy decides for the special inter- in these vafious, personal, intimate, pocketbook mat- ters, we certainly will lase a lot of hair, figuratively speaking. This experiment subject of ge opens a boy or man | health there ts nothir Importan wo s companies limit the amount used by automobiles? When huge dinosaur eggs were common, ham and eggs were probably a ham and an egg. ntylen, Bizex (oh Tee # sedative effec Shantung . apf women, per square n But the little » t nly ou 1 | det on in mental and physical r The pleasure y be a good thing to ¢ of tobacco on an exact dos. Umit and apply it therapeuti-| province there are Dinosaurs walked on four feet, Hope their discovery doesn’t start « dinosaur dance, rons and bable ace and pea LETTER If Jack Dempsey is all rested up now maybe he will try to tackle a come to th football team. poverty 1, Choose y ELIZABETH QUIGLEY young men 25 would cived n ag at al on: 1 Married man tells us be is assistant head of his house, Ballots Versus Bullets In looking back over turbulent Oklahoma and the elec- tion that marked the beginning of the end for Goy. Wal- ton’s despotism, the fact which stands out brightest of all is that his overthrow was accomplished without a shot be- ing fired or a drop of blood being shed, A “peaceful revolution” it w and at the same time a tribute to the efficacy of the Ameri form of govern- ment. It demonstrated that the ballot, rather than the bul- ] ffers the best redress for civil i political wrongs. he nation owes a lot to those ne and clear-headed klahomans who, under threat of bloodshed by Gov. Wal- ton, replied not in kind, but grimly buckled on their shoot- ing irons and stood guard at the polls so that the will of the people might be expressed in orderly fashion, Had they resorted to violence or had they adopted Walton's methods, Oklahoma would have run red with blood and a nation that boasts of the freedom of its people to seek redress at the voting booths would have been bowed in shame. The outcome was a defeat for Gov. Walton rather than a victory for the Ku Klux Klan, for the battle. ry of the “revolution” was, “We Want Neither Klan Nor King.” Fighting the common foe, Klansmen and anti-Klansmen alike strapped on their guns and stood side by side at the polls to see that the voters got a square deal. Hurriedly organized, the “ballot box revolution” gave Oklahomans op- portunity to express their attitude on a foolish and unneces- sary dictatorship. As for Goy. Walton, little need be said. Like every other dictator in history, he chose a worthy movement to de- ceive the people. His fight on the Klan was the vehicle for furthering his selfish purposes. The virtue which lay in the movement at the start became vice when mi applied. The nation is proud that Oklahoma chose the sane w ay to correct a wrong. ‘ armth ts nee call th "You've da it's ‘Oyster Week,’ y LETTERS EDITOR An Experience in Wenatchee % many other places. The hotels have |all raised their prices, also the res taurants, and spend days around t ing to get some kind of on in the bracing i] man I spok air of North Ce a to three different ranches ton and carn > 1 congenial occupy hn Work plentiful for several the nd men and women. Apply a | natchee Commercial Club or the ‘< eo —— U. 8. Employment Bureau, We: Miter everybody gets well educated there will be nobody left to do our natchee, Washington. werk for us. * was * 2 ORCHARD HELP WANTED tn ds of the We ogan Valleys Enjoy a people Just before 2 man worries his wife to death, she hopes his next wife is 4 good pistol shot. road fare for nothing in one day, If anyone was fortunate enough to work, hore is the scale of wages {I took them off the biac employment agency): I ; Heing a movie star's husband must be # nice life, but there is no | Elitor The Star FY ballon hicm arrheigto ey. aaah future in it. | Your paper always seems so just in| board, a net earning of $2; sorters, iv, 1 am writing to you a day of 10 hours, $1.10 a day will expose this one. | for board; $2.40 for your day's labor. ving here dally and So u can readily how condi- adder and wiser in an- | tion It cot mo $15 for the ex- ence, which was small compared A friend and myself went over. | with some who had been there longer. | There are men and women there by Hoping you will expose this out- the hundreds and no work for them, | rage, I am sincerely, They came from Spokane, Seattle D. | Bremerton, Aberdeen, Portland and 1004 Que Land and Maternity ity can produce an unlimited quan been appropriated. The only way | ain a larger national acreage is | landowning nations an live in com t tipon one square mile of fertile jland. Germany had a population of 57 persons per square mile of fortile as inevitable. Six mil- lion men lost their lives In an effort Painting a car or a face never kills the knock in the engine. The Death of a Millionaire _ A New York society woman dies. The physician attend- ing her in her last illness refuses to sign the death certifi- cate, and says that the way the husband talked of wills and estate, during the woman’s last hours, made him sick, An expert eviscerates the corpse and finds poison. The wom- an’s old father comes forward and declares that she was iG capacitated to make a will. A family scandal probably lies in the background and every skeleton in the family closet will get its picture in the papers. The attorney general of jan income New York will devote much time and the New York treas- | per ury much money in getting at the bottom of the matter. | Per cent of the) wealth, 33 All the fuss because the woman had some millions of | Berets in Tike povarty eines: des money. But there is nothing unusual about the case of pee in of the people, Mrs. Webb. It has come to pass that, in nine cases out of |5 per cent of the wealth ten, where a person dies leaving much wealth, the fathers, Fe A mothers, sons, daughters and other relatiy. gather atnitrid 1S rat sates ao anata the corpse to fight one another to the limit and hate one |———" sea another forever afterward. The millionaire who dies with- out leaving an inheritance of aroused greed, envy and hatred to his “loved ones” is the decided exception. The wise millionaire puts his money where he nts it, while | living, thus defeating the family fighter, would take out his insides, and the lawyers, swer to this ad inclosed pe 3. SCOTT, Anne Ave. Editor The Star In the United States there are 27 000,000 familie and Of leos than $850. cent of the population’ own per cent nation he. pacifist nation and sink to f Chi India? In THE HERO | BY BERTON BRALEY put he finished up in ten ind a servant unto men! hemmed and hawed a bit, d after that—he quit en cheered and cheered s, and he finished up in T Does your morning drink “perk” you up only at the expense of “jumpy nerves” all day? Isn't that too big a price to pay for a break- fast cup? Isn't your body getting the wrong end of the bargain? Ghirardellis Ground Chocolate isa friendly cup. Ithas nothing up its sleeve but health. It meets you on even terms at the breakfast table. It stays with you on the same terms all day. It is a good friend to your digestion and a better friend to your nerves. An ideal blend of fine cocoa, chocolate and pure sugar—all nar | tural energy foods—Ghirardell's is the ideal breakfast drink forall the family. Tastes good in the the expert who REIS ETE RS | Doctors say an Alabama man who started over a fence with a loaded gun will recover, peak such a much of wense, 5 ralyzed, t They gave him TWENTY minute His diction But still he Bet the ancient dinosaur had to cro ow like a cannon after laying six inches long. ying eggs N all post-prandial history no finer deed fs known, Among the dinner orators his figure stands alone! A gratitude unlimited from all of us lie’« won, We'll vote for him for pres if he should care to run. He pulled a stunt that hitherto was quite beyond our ken: They gave him twenty minutes—and he finished up in ten! Two can't live cheaper than one, but they can keep warmer, We're Waiting for This Word “When Magnus Johnson begins to discover that the United States government is sound to the core—that there is no graft in legislation—that the executive is beyond the reach of flattery or intimidation—that the judicial ‘depart- ment is incorruptible—and that congress, for all its faults is honest—when he makes these discoveries , 8 the Washington Post. When and if DEED without a precedent But should he turn to pir We'll treat these tht And, when he this shall be we can't express our thanks, or busting open banks, and let him go his way; monument we'll rear above his clay, taph we'll carve in marble then, TY minutes, but he Cinished up in ‘TE t 19) 6 as trivi » he will say 4 (Copyrig jenttle Star) Man in Cincinnati who wante elved by the the darn thing wouldn't, upplick and Aco Washingt da street car to dodge his auto found For that school lunch ESiuthill Cheese is rich in food value OPARORORenOUAHeRetenon Koa ma € ng glycerine five Vast as candidates throw their hats into the potitieat ri litical ring somebe mud on them, pte tole extinguishing Yard, f CHOCOLATE — You see autos purked all along the country roads these nights, perl oh geronoe “—drink to your own health Fie Pah ion eat rand aAnteant, with Ghirardelli Si naater eneval ee AdVertives Only three were bagged in one Michigan hunt—three hunters,