Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SEATTLE STAR YAY, NOVEMBER 22, 19: cots Nov They do not © that the | and diversification of crops, Men can 1 . Bet law controlling the dealing in fu RUE Mee histi-nealne. na. Teal | ao ott uce, Then we might | of three-fourths of the value of world are going naked and cut e S apecialiaing tures in the terminal grain hope, apparently, in the old } artificially raine our prices by the wheat thru the new Inter ting down their cotton demand i , , ™ e - rkets has done vI LOOK | t AW i 1 | ‘ . fe youre, felting how the f arma markets ha x ne them any good | remedies, are agitating for co | law. But our olty folka would mediate Credit banks, It is pre starvin 4 cutting down i Ki Bice wittatiee that contrasts | iu stabilising p hoy laugh | operation along the old Rochdale Hever consent to this, ‘The oned to hold t ) ties ‘y r our present tarift: law ta mene || All these things are signs of to be #o rained; and they i a in At ari at i wang pba yt ree t PRON, the past thrwe oF fous credits law, providing for longer. | the agony of economile suffering ity of farmern would vote Aich? plans nevatiworic lh a |< curiwhalt aad oettod: wouldbe KI Dadar ahG eablon OP earl y AO PANS Whatever they do in the way of Caasamnie against the tax on their backs fleld open to world competitic licked P th da; Tere | ay None can give, they that what protest ia legitimate if it calls WORLD'S 4 and stomachs for the benefit of I i : 5 bad dpa ne culture in the United States have Thais ahd tah ani asevenn iby i TORUS ) ‘ fee ea 4 r unless they cre necom: ied by But they cannot buy from us bean’ alec. tho... troubles of our SORT EN eh Re OE GEC RODE eit eee mana ee SIR DUD Bese wae SUPPLY PGs CRO ROG Es A ALORS 4 decreased production, ‘The sur because we, thru our tariff laws, be government. ‘The farmers have wa then: THAASTREGA IRCA Aran tie am a farmer myself, and who : D would neem, t that the plus held back becomes a night. | refuse to take the goods with be! Hecome a nuisance to Washing Bac Rey ah ot hy Rate at Sey i aa capaeive tay will | pare to the holders after the | which they would pay for our Phd ox Wor It in alvws Sang Ave see c growing ot wo ur farmers must reé regular marketing season has wheat and cotton, So they go 0! Bese ari koraoeata os wocial ls REVOLTING FARMERS S! | for 60 yours, Belay ateetoge Ne ea aml RR Reo oe Ai8 elt leek ana Ema hd NR el Nese ites: otipes nating pant? [oceabeilacd ner haired? th , ee mney wk OWN SOLONS TO CON | PAMLING AGRICULTURE TO Henn theta there, ‘the. Bp tion If we were cpmpletely shut out There is no hope that we shail should boost pr it will cause actually made poor because we A Mei timira: thro’ the. farm In the Kast and South they | AERC? CIVILIZATION | f ate a cotton from the world by an impassable | ever as farmers be relieved Al ry bin all over the world to have a glut hat they want 5 boom in a dozen tropleal coun. wall, rome of our crops would our strenuous competitic | | have a glut of what they want sy bloc, have held at times the bal find that they must allow their | If agriculture languishes our | tries. rot on the farms for | etl Bipetilion: with scraped for wheat to sell, Are | Suppose that our tariff laws to Bs Ance of power in both the house fields to revert to sterility be | civilization then enters upon its In wheat and other grains the Seeks area orton mites (a eRe Ra aghad things as the itina and Australia and Ware to taodities an 40 tat tte a and the senate, They have swept cause of the high price of fers | decline, And it In languishing competition is keen with India ora aro ns maka: hoes ibs | Loerie pe Abogg and and south Africa foreigners wend in duty free the nof Into power several state govern: tiller. In Minnesota, thence | armors all over the world are | Argentina, Australia and the Pp Rotate Rah cs cc aNdall Me tol cd plan for try India and Southern Asia ge goods they produce on a basis den ments, Rut in spite o@these suc: | west and south, they are in po: | in strenuous competition with | countries of Burope, Russia is | wore clone enough to Liverpool wet nad oat the surplus jn’ | ‘ally could sow wheat, relyin | of bartering for our farm prod- an cesses, and of the measures | litical revolt, and have sent to each other. Our farmers have Crit Getic Ge tha wheat take | GAA MANOMEAER to kal Gaels Mars wldtng coe ga SOD the holding back of the Ameri. ucts, It would enable the farm g pliq passed supposedly for the relief | Washington Shipstead, Johnson, no monopoly of any product ket | pradiveta te (hose. mavicith i feeb 6 hams rae reanerite A: be mae Iy a: Wee: would give) them ers who are holding thelr wheat i g ‘of the basic industry of agricul Brookhart, and the non-partisan worth mentioning. In cotton | If we shut out tho foreign | hid SAUL be.bo HAE <i ¥ Se ae <a me the farmers | six months’ notice, That's all fo: sell Gut good pric It g fes ture, the farthers were never #0 leaguers. | production, if our farmers were palin li WOLdbinc guelcaxount, | démeamiadarcageiutind out. |’ cewn. preoarion hing lei bes i Te a might replace nakedness and tha Gepressed or so discontented as | ‘They are talking in the wheat | to so organize ay to make cotton | perhaps temporarily in certain | put, or developed our domestic | atihtd lancet) A onemde tld The trouble tn both wheat and | starvation abroad with plenty. 1 the they now are. * and cotton regions of dairying searce In the World's markets speclaltise—for: we produss more. | consumption to “iriore than we | aa borrow wae yt the extant | site Ue aed in ae acts ; The commend the {dea to the farm he poverty-stricken peoples of tho ' bloc, uw u < leaj AAAS RA AAA AAA SMILES LEWER ERom | SCIENCE [ THE FOUR WINDS watches don't care what time It Ii First Used in 1000. Fort sand ote orsientit V RIDGE Pid NIN Rpsciagie Use Grows. % BY BERTON BRALEY question is simple, He will refuse it b LANI HE North Wind is a chill-wind ate aed and wel Th we The Seattle Star Published Dally by The Star Publishing Co. 1307 Seventh Main 0600, Newspaper Enterprise Association and United Pres mall, out of city, 60c per month, 2 months $1.60, ¢ menthe $2.0 By carrier, city. §6c a month @ Gliman, a Representatives. San Franctsce t Sreeipeh effica, Mon ke Bide. Tribune Bidg.; New York office are Nov, 22, 1923. The uso of spectacles has grown A shrill wind Canadien P : A To the Rellingham Kiwanis Club enormously in the last 10 year A bold wi pe I sought the old Kiwanis club, within the Gowman's busy Formerly only old perrons whose I stles of the wintry seas and of the frozen trall; strong wind and a cruel, a b " That calls hard-bitted rovers to ba’ rah and bitter cold wind, torm and gale. hampion Hares. they let me come and share the grub—to be precise, sight was falling resorted to gli Where Does Your $34 Go? a ie a fa neat ag a slice of ham! The bunch attacked the bill of fare wlth Now it is not uncommon to cor How much of your hard-earned money is being spent they. expect while a many do »f guato, nolse and din; but with it all, they gave ua, rect slight defects in the eyesight rae East Wind is a low wind, ® |- for government? The tax question is coming to the front bap “Cheln sents. expec: there, the girt who played the olin? of children by the use of acientii A again, so here’s a summary of ‘the tax spenders sup- | Gee Canta Ghe ic the SG They sang a song of long ago—the fulep-tulip-rose affatr; it tg dy aac po i EN ee f ported by the taxpayers. |the man you would be if it didn't I thought, “By golly, how we grow! I bet I've lost an- tacles was made possit a Navin oh dca a” wind. There are 2,700,000 public servants on the payroll of |tke so darn much energy I" And everybody sang with force—they’d known Arablan astronomer named Alhazen. Where age-old peoples « ilar anne. national, state and municipa] governments in America, | |, , <a i949 pure os ein. /6C, Seenty’ yours es pt, of He was bern at Bassor, Turkey : Liege 5 | If a peach ts not a lemon, she je girt who played the vi about 1,000 A, D. sent Bios TLE ‘West ‘i | and their pay $3,500,000,000 a year, according to a check- | usuntly gets the ap mona Teccha Face. HaGaNGGa Sak Plea deh fh ae. a re ata Fay pobeas oes T= West Wind keen wind, | _up by the national industrial conference board. which; of course, makes a pair, pisuled the rule. 'They croudht alent a dourlo: pair. oh the discoverer of the facts of Arclean wing, This huge figur® doesn’t include the 670,000 pensioners ae see girla who: came from Normal aches, They pave the. place mal vis Ho was the first te SP eat ee ort ae ete | and other inactive persons receiving support—the whole pare te if A man can s pe nuty spot, and wagged a rcinning 41 chin; and learn t it’ pica talasian A Bpevoat F dot collecting $320,000,000 a year. SisOeTS dakth in batt a ace We a eee cath epee thaund ts afrika cpent ore fatnas ot Geet ee So taxpayers are supporting 3,370,000 tax spenders— Sf Trae wai > Then Walter Whitcomb ran a show that not a pessimist Gai the itioseanon 1a okerisa?tar the The breath of open country and of azure skies and clear. or, as a wag calls them, “tax eater: And the cost of Christmas will be here December outa satis" “2 theuwht,: thniceee made it po, “There's brain by nerve. He explained MPHE South Wind is a shy wind the whole lot is not far from $4,000,000,000 a year, FOR | 25. Mail packages early so you can not a ham in Bellingham! [ Why, with: two. eyes we. Go sotisee T A ind, j | SALARIES ALONE. - da ayia ear ee pride ‘the merry crowd they « bh lac mired detpeet te the A wart w | « The public payroll costs every man, woman and child . chien ada MPLS "he I ae ve and laziness where tropic waters foam; { | in the country an average of $34. year. The cost is $91 eer e Man. sites ss West } a year for every American over 10 years of age. nchoo! Cirriddge Tamm was . Furthermore, one person out of every 12 over the age ‘ere aa ght of 16 in America is a public employe. In other words, Ra ‘4 every 11 taxpayers are supporting one tax spender. yas i m Py Y will find many good bargains|and 5 t believe in petticoa’ The cost of state, county and municipal governments ' | has increased tremendously since before the war. Wil- ited liam P. Helms, Jr., an able authority, estimates that state governments alone cost $1,443,000,000 in 19: 2. This figure includes all items of expense—salartes, interest on | debt, etc. : $, the sbootlegger a Christmas The really important question, of course, is what tax- [oid ones are al! w istomers. BH payers are getting for their money, rather than how | many are getting it. ttle Aut 1 We don't wear Judge m.|'em ar » Christ Potential , Presidents i ARM MEO RT The department of agriculture reports there are only threetenths of 1 per cent more hogs in the country now than there were this time last year. We thoughtwre'd seen more. They must mean just regulars, and not road or rent hogs. containing a numbers Exports from Sweden have suffered a terrific slump in the past nino months. Now we know why we haven't been able to find that Swedish | hired girl for she missus. Do you know a man who smokes a Explorer Rasmussen has discovered poets among the Eskimos. That's what comes of a steady blubber diet. T wentieth Anniversary of the Founding of the UnionN ational Bank Honest Charley A picturesque character has departed this life in New York City—Charley Mahoney. In his day he probably was the greatest stakeholder of election bets in our coun- try’s history. e ientes ane tis "At one time Charley held as high as $700,000 in bets. |casting stations ninese And never, in his long career, was he asked for a eee ‘or office should be Most women voter Trains are earrying radio ot receipt! v a girl tells a man she likes All of us strive to win the confidence of our fellowmen, [Pim Detter than ever, tt ts a nigu of Seattle | It is invaluable, for our own satisfaction and as a requi- fe See ee site for making good. To Charley it came naturally. rov November 23, 1923 People trusted him by instinct. A great lesson in per- Ga i : sonality—the force that is born in us. [ A Thought ows Personality is invisible, cannot be weighed. It is the Real Self. The spider taketh hold with Old-timers say that 20 million dollars in bets passed [hands and is in kings’ palaces.— |, thru the hands of Charley Mahoney. Prov. xxx.28, | In 1904 he was holding $600,000 of bets, but was dan- HEN devils ers gerously ill at home. No one worried, for they knew W sins put on, they money with Charley was “all right.” At midnight, elec- | first , that Desai tion results were known. A cab drew up at the curb. peare. ton: Aneel . . ; ‘ It is the hearty wish of these directors, officers Two men helped Charley out and into the cafe, where he a and stockholders that the friendly relations, long E paid off. The exposure and excitement nearly killed him. to Men who are chronically late at keeping appointments, sxictino’ wi ; ‘ % / men who are not altogether reliable about meeting their the mage hi ee t] led 3 1 for that purpose, the pledge is given by the obligations, reflect! Mahoney, outstanding figure of a period that was management of the Union Nation: Janke Pas. crowded with picturesque characters, was said to be worth fully ‘endeavor to fully, lpeabrpet devant ahaha ho s ys ale e half a million when he retired in 1910. He died in pov- Praises Tacoma Judge bank, as heretofore, and even in steadily increasing erty and the explanation along Broadway is, “He had | gait O the many thousands of depositors and cus- tomers of this bank, its officers and directors and stockholders extend their thanks and ap- preciation of their splendid co-operation and pat- ronage for the period of twenty years since its foundation. thelr blackest ith heavenly too many friends.” ur atte to an edi | Ohya ppg late 832: are measure, He left this bit of advice to gamblers: “Always bet ji ; Aukren, wie DIRECTORS with the idea that you are likely to lose, and if you can’t jtght in his JAMES D. HOGE, Ch afford to lose don’t bet.” by] The Jud ld be m BALLINGEI oes, ded for his fearlessne President wart & Holme In addition, how otherwise could Mr. Lioyd George have learned of H, BERRINGER rug Co ; FRINE foe President Washington Ir J. A. SWALWELL n > Works President the feeling itv Ireland had ho not visited New York and heard from | ey are C alae A Plea for Sanity T. J. THO! Our government is trying to live within ts Income, Wish it would try ? ment will have control and ’ 3 4 t seems sh the w atio " ROBT. P. GREE N living without ours. 1 ms foolish nations! world harmony will be much nearer aol President Washington Shoe Mo. td iA PEN a n Europe are acting. If the people |than it is now B tr q tity Pacific Ammonia sep rory: : Shoe Mfg. Co — & Chemical Co 7R E. TODD could be broadened to the point] ‘The wireless, tel phone, telegraph J. D. LOWMAN Donworth, Todd & Higgins, Lawyers Mr. Harvey’s Pants above nationalistic ambition ite edbaect Geaisitet ©. W. WILEY Ring the bells! Spread the glad tidings! George Har- |tnited § at wabone und sie Reparat ton 2 Na oe The hale ee yey will retain his silken pants! \all forms of diplomatic skullde tad Phage a ® should not OFFICERS Positively and emphatically, Mr. Harvey says he “will The nation: hands but should not give away, sell, donate or otherwise part company” |{°,'"* a SH nation nerselt, ‘and ATA RWALWHEL iene with his court suit, which includes those shimmering |way or another, an ffers the mor LP B STEWART oT. D. LOT Mee tra Lataiciven rustlesiid dolor to cur recent. |wxeo spd Popes veined bet : truly, RALPH 8. STACY A.B. STEWART J.D. LOWMAN D. G. SCHMITZ Se matic history. T a leaves Ambassador Frank B. Wh Protic Sane O. W. TUPPER, Cashier a By WHITTY, Trust Officer <ellogg with no other alternative than to buy from an- meee. es a f KELLEY, As CASPAR W CLARKE other source a brand new silken outfit for his very own. tor The Sta y rotect One Day x Alansser Foreign, Backs .¢ The Harvey mantle may he have, but the Harvey pant Tam interested in this! mage Hatten ne yenenaee at RTT eGapet Tees Huraice oh never! questiot ee 15 onan. nye “eaten doi eee i We think we can understand Mr. Harvey. Village pride {°,S"°"”: sersta : “ay Sih eae Miigessct ‘him, 2s well as nation: SCHARE’ he. dcsivad ere ate FB ip pore a “ “ aturday or BRANCH AT BALLARD BRANCH AT GEORC( yj pants—Peacham, where overalls and cotton socks, from soe pot ig & } ime immemorial, have been the height and full measure [ons * ig ; : ' Mie: ‘ of sartorial adornment. It yuld be great for Meacham Are we t t tect a and | tire ee and equally fine of Harvey a . rele [We donot ene ra Stop Coughing Perhaps entirely too much ix expacted of an automobile that has alco ‘Tbs simplest and beat way to ntoy hol in its radiator and behind its steering wheel. The international boundary may lose some of it ture, Alberta | " I t ‘ er : ‘ "Ai i Ingrippe coughe nto take has voted to drint own liquor ib sO be : a CHAMBERLAIN’S Men who act serious all the time are usually considered funny pe t 3 rae ! COUGH REMEDY 1 very user is @ friend ,