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PAGE 6 THI KATTLE ST PUESD FEBRUARY 1924 ee AR The Seattle Star l “Busted Busts” HOW YOU CAN TEST YOURSELE —Number Five a, “ cocopreaningnteinsisinnetn \ a, a a] @ Star Pudliohing Co, 1897 Seventh Ave, Phone ae a anne : Enterprise Association and United Pi Bervies, By TOU differ from ir friends are yloyed by factories a é | ! rT 2 « 7 accomplis! and mnel problems, j on yet . t; New York offics, vom Do you kr just how brig phywicians look after healt ul toate Pon’t Stop at Fall -| {THERE is a lot of talk now about prosecutions in : connection with the oil lease scandal. There is a tendency for this talk to center around ex- Secretary Fall. The ugly word “bribery” is used In this connection. But prosecuting Fall on the ART GALLERY | TAROT DON | % eg Your Own Third D ree | y for you t job. Your el: 1 y mn XT | 1 J g f YFORMATIO onnes I 0 t dren will be given them in YOUR RANGE OF INFORM: N Charge of having received bribes from Doheny and eel 4 4 Sinclair will not be enough. If the law says it is a |g inusanda of men tn the army Myroecap erent crime for a public official to receive a bribe, there | | by Intelligence teats, and Edson | VW tA™ Je in your store of | as just as good a law that says it is also a crime to | | Used & apecial kdnd when he ap ~| you tearned from ming ; Offer or give the dirty money. That meansthat for | Fraduates who applied to ties | cnr people, from reading news all their millions, Doheny and Sinclair share equal- for fobe. a s subiehea wan | 5 seu ir usual bust | ly in any guilt of Fall. In the eyes of the public, oll ti roan Gok meters | ee ees | eir position is even worse. A public official can- about yournolf. They will not von ise ONG MINOKE tn i "1 il it is of: | make you your own psycholo- which to do ft, Read these 41 eg ire eee and unt fal ary Heel Ra jaa Mage onc “1, The lungs are for SEEING, BREATHING, DIGESTION, Tn this case, it would be a shameful thing if, as licence ‘tents and interprating | gl, TM, @ result of the great oil scandal, Fall, and Fall grotenaien ah the treating of em 4. The Panama Canal was bult by RUBSIA, ENOLAND, MIX. alone, should suffer the humiliation of public trial. nick. Professional peyehologists | 100, UNITED STATES, | | | % d Tt would be a shameful thing were the two million- | | 4. Robert E Leo was famous in LITERATURE, WAR, RE- i i i | | LIGION, SCIEN ‘aires concerned with him to escape that ordeal, What Folks | 1AQION, SCIENCE, AZT ACID, SOUR Bertie oe } , 6. Tho forward pass is used in TENNIS, HANDBALL, CHESS, je farmer who won't diversify Is going to have something dono for | Are Sa wm YOOTHALL. The r y i him, anyway. Mr, Coolidge 1s to raiso the duty on whe per cent | | 4. General Lee surrendered at Appomattox in 1912, 1886, 1866, and @ bank president and a railroad president are to head the $10,000,000 ae i | 1008 a : fagrletularal Service corporation. When in doubt, ralse thé tariff! | are: ee MAN, te buster: | "8. To set fire to « house fe called LARCENY, INCEST, MAY- § KE | evtenie ee . ¥en hey,| HEM, ARSON . . t A \! dey: An “tik ie rH pn | Lincoln was president just after BUCHANAN, HAYES, MADI- - } | a tine Syl ge Bey | , POLK. Bi-Partisan Em ploymen ' Bene) | Magli Deena Par John Aargent {s a well known AUTHOR, SCIENTIST, POLI WN the course of a speech in the senate, in which he } ii anal cienale wink, Gat en 0 tire) ICIAN, PAINTER. ofen' A: shia ia fe tad How many have you correct? lthe semis ne “teat coerce be; Absward?” 1, Ureathings Kr Uiniied Wales; Gos} 4, wary Ktrecks } Pe fight I had to land him in| ¢ football; 7, 1866; %, arson; 9, Buchanan: 10, painter, (Copyright by Science Service boat, believe me.” | 924) ottom of the this mome fering from acute shock. The credit of public men has W d i W ] ‘Th I b + E ae 26 | : - Ev estved ring blow. In the eyes of multitudes of people, publi oodrow 1 son, ru Jador § wy CS DR. THOMAe alg maith al Telling It | poarch has been basls of the men here in Washington, quite irrespective of party, are looked upon * ow York Halt pattio in g grea Cevelopment nm mod sfas badly bespattered. Someth! id of sickness ia not to worry i like an explosion has occurred very rid of #ickn 7 ~ “AN PRD r ~ > dus Every great manufac FROM AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR ligA’ Sth Auee Gaby, Glee ane to Congress suid Unt ceay sete Geeer the foundations of the capi . Aimppointinent all affect the sys-| dustry has as a part of its trained In the language of the strap-hanger, Senator Pepper poy (Excerpta from the Congressional } sna paid personnel an organisation said a mouthful. W'7H._Washiagtog and Lin Legislation that marked a | of the world war Until convinced | eee Record) Of the best scientists that it is pos- Sena ‘. iv ility P coln, Woodrow Wilton be | great turning potnt tn the lives | We no longer in \honor could re DR. W. ¥. P. FAUNCE, president |sible for them to get—F. B. Mum A “Hoa tad ee Liga aad i ay ae Na longs to the ages. Speaking in of Our people came into being mee eeeee |Brown university: “The world waits TAXY CABS |ford, University. of Missourl, before ymind wonderfully skilled and trained. , : the name of the tolling cusses under his leadership, The sea. | upon the church, It fs the time of] May I put in the record the list of | house committee on ©} Recognizing that official Washington is scared, Sena- of our country, we offer our ‘ aderahiy sit agriculture. wh |the church's great opportunity, Nev. h vi t ro jcab men's act, a arade ta teas tho various taxes that the taxicab tribute to the great leader who Stor Pepper cleverly and truthfully uses that feeling of | has passed from ux. bondmen ‘of Ameri ina tha | jer before has it been so real, #0 vital| operators of this country have to| MALMO & Co. pete that is growing in the minds of the politicians of Win “aacearate ie late Clayton act, which asserted that | “ joa j te. all the' peoples | pay? Thees. ol errs prope 1 parties to persuasively point the way to a course of will forever ¢ 1 the memory | |. thaw. ta tute awaythat | IDA CLYDE CLARKE, assistant | oot. porary gets’ LASTCHANCE Bi feonduct that is the natural one for professional politi- of Woodrow He was would bring irit ay editor Pictorial Review: “Uncle|t a states, state fran- | cians. | the true representative of thé | aaa ta ke a ods of intert ri re Bam needs a wife, If women did|chise tax, federal income tax, atate| fi vi i i i Weallam upon which our repub- | cen Peers: a nccord with that ideallem that is lthetr housekeeping in as wasteful |income tax, automobile license tax—| iH The program is to switch the oil scandal into the silent | lie & founded and of sourtt ee ee tO the founda lic and extravagant @ manner an Uncle jin pred ‘of the pe two thee: as! Tprecincts of the courts. Sterilize and undramatize it. | 9 indomitable purpose and hon- | and roclal justice. Sine | America’s bow [gam runs hie government, any|sessed both by the state and be the| Then our assorted statesmen will be able to recover | ay which ig at the heart of | 7. seas rams ran} ise oe Pot — in Pinte © to the | snage in the city would give thelr | city—guaoline storage tax, minor} F j merica, ed the challenge of | fallen leader. hey mourn A |iuspands divorces.” | etefiens sarage tax, wheel tax, breath, re-drape the disarranged togas and turn REAL 005 Te eee: When. wen Node | nest ettilca) and moral | freat eftisen’ a groct chowmnion | usbandas roaa.” [Privilege tax, garage tax, wheel tax, | } solicitpr’s Hcense tax, the excise tax | the public their unctuous countenances of political | great leader during the dark | dards that men had evo | Sf honor and of righteousness, | wyILE MOUE, the “better-and-|or $10 per cab pee year, cad the ¢ | hypocrisy, while from practiced lips the flow of familiar | daya of the war; the leader un eee en eee son The humble ones of the world |petter* Frenchman: “It ts not will| por cent federal tax per cab pn the kum is resumed. | der whose Guicanes ithe free | kent te ont of tho maelstrom have leet da _inderstanding jPower that t# the first quality in| original price of the cab, the mile ane li soe | peoples of the world came to riend and an unfaitering cham~ |inen tt {9 tmaginat! There srelage tax, the occupation tax, the The sort of prosecutor for a case os bm Is ee | derstand the ts | pion. But the idealism, the no jmany persons who are sick, blind |etate liability tax the soldiers’ edu. ‘trial lawyer whose mental equipment includes shrewdness | volved fn that titanic conf! bility of spirit, the example of jand paralyzed because they think |cation tax, | The burden which he hore ind skill in investigation and the ability to trace guilt ; the transportation tax, | devotion to duty, will live for: |they are” aaa the tekken thru the devious mazes that are constructed to conceal ithe hiding place of the predacious. Tn Strawn and Pomerene there have not been selected ‘counsel and investigators to conduct this case, but a sort of bi-partisan employment agency to hire lawyers and de- ectives to conduct the case. Mr. Pomerene brings down @ trio of young lawyers to do the trial work and Mr. ‘Strawn’s contribution thus far has been no more inspiring @ person than Hinton G. Claybaugh, of Chicago, to take ‘charge of the investigating side of the case. Claybaugh will be remembered from the fact that he made his exit from the department of justice, where hé q a secret service operative, to take employment with he Peabody Coal Co., while his assistant, Barry,’ got his ob with Swift & Co. THERE IS NO NEED TO GO INTO DETAIL. IT IS SUFFICIENT TO SAY THAT, AS THE PICTURE EGINS TO TAKE FORM AND AS THE CHARACTERS RE CAST ON THE PEOPLE'S SIDE OF THIS OIL OSECUTION, IT BECOMES MORE AND MORE AP- ;PARENT THAT THE LID IS TO BE PUT BACK ON sy TEAPOT. Senator Couzens wants a law to compel members of the cabinet to | come before congress and explain what they're deing. Good idea, if y had any time left to do anything to explain, Where Wilson Rests is altogether fitting that Woodrow Wilson, the man of peace, should be the first American president whose tbody is laid to rest in the new national cathedral, “America’s Westminster Abbey,” on the heights of Mt. St. Alban, overlooking the capital. During his administration he carried out Roosevelt's of a great and beautiful Washington. The na- cathedral, first proposed by George Washington, ‘Was one of the things he had hoped to see dedicated. Tn_his plan for, a national capital, Washington pro- posed “a church for national purposes, such as public prayer, thanksgiving, funeral orations, et cetera, to be signed to no particular sect, but equally open to all.” Congress never saw fit to establish such a church with ‘public funds, but in recent years the Episcopal church $ undertaken the project. All sects now have joined in construction, with the assurance that the national ede | will be “a church for national purposes, equally to all.” Tt is a worthy cause, and the fact that Wilson, the =great man of peace, is to be buried there, will assure for fall time the existence of the national cathedral as one of pemerica’s greatest shrines. 1 Aer a D O NE Lincoln's Birthday, 1924, Dear Folks: The Indiana cabin knew no life of ease and joy; and skies were very seldom blue, when Lincoln was a boy. His child- hood days of school and play were very few indeed; he even had to fight his way in learning how to read. + + But, from a start so bare and vain, ho made his great advance— while many fellows still complain they “never had a chance!" In Ilinois, his larger lite began with splitting rails. It gave him toll and grief and strife—and debts and sheriff's rales, It brought him many fail@res, too; and days of deep distress, It gave him, then, a work to do, a human race to bdless, - + » Undaunted, still, he fought hia way for what he thought was right—how many of us now, today, put up so brave a fight? In Washington, the greatest goal the nation has In store, he found a strife to try his soul thru years of civil war. With foes without and foes within, he played his greatest part; and thru it all he called thern kin, and held them in his heart. . . . For Lincoln seemed to feel and know the griet of all the land—perhaps because he suffered no, he Jearned to understand! Ciritye Tomms | regular pack. The joker counts for| tho great struggle for human freedom crushed him and left him the saddest casualty of the war. But ft was not only tn war that hig heart beat high with resolve for tuman better ment; he wea ever the great idealiat, ever the noble fighter for democracy, justice and human progress. Sy | The Institutions of our coun- try bear the indelible impreas of his leaderahtp, and vision of his courage QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS can get an answer to any question of fact or Informa- tion by writing to The Question Editor, Star's Washington Bu- 22 N. ¥. Ave, Washing~ « enclosing two cents in or reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be iven, nor can extended rea rch © undertaken. Unsigned re- ueste cannot be answered — EDITOR. Q. Who painted “The Weeping Magdaloner” A. The most famous of the many Weeping Magdalenes {9 that by Charles Lebrun, now hanging in the-Louvre, Paris. see Q. Which 4s the largest county tn the United States? A. San Bernardino county, Call- fornia; area 20,175 square miles. oe Q. What ts Mistigriss A. Draw poker, the only differ- ence being that it is played with 53 cards, the joker being added to the any card the player who holds it} may desire, Thus he may hold flv of a kind. This hand beats a royal flush. Otherwise, draw poker rules govern the game. eee Q. When were glass mirrors first used? A. In-Ventes in 1900 A.D. eee Q. What was the average height of the ancient Eoyptianar A. About 6 fect, 7 Inches. eee Q. Has there been any inorease in the size of the brain cavity of man? A. Yes, the brain cavity of the modern man is larger than the brain cavity of the ancient. Frieda’s Follies WHAT MORE appropriate than that I SHOULD have a parrot? YOU SEE, I have a sense of hu- mor, EV cerned. SO HAD this clerk in the bira store. I BOUGHT some seed for Polly. “SHE'S the most talkative little bird IN town,” I said. HE paid: “WILL you eat It now, OR wait until you get hom Bs sid minal Aloe i cand AE TREATED ONE ROPSY week FREE meting etre Sena kona ae mae cad 28 years of success in treating Dropsy.) Aavertisoment Evil communications corrupt good xv. 33. manners —L MAN'S manners arp a mirror, in which ho ah to the intelligent observer, | ever, inepiring men and women | eee | always, leading them always to MRS. WALTER KIRTON, Nat. | Steater deeds and better lives. jrota, British East Africa: tee | _ Woodrow Wilson lived for the ltrees are much like cherry “trees people, and the people for all lpne growth.and fruit are the same, time will cherish the heritage he Jand we speak of ‘coffee cherries. has left them. The trees are pruned at a height ows his likeness Gosthe | which, allows the ‘cherries’ on the |man's hand. Every grain of coffes jin the world is picked by hand.’ | Altho the birds, which slowly jevolved from reptiles, according to (naturaliste, have wonderful voices, lonly two of the great reptile family lemit any sound at all—the alligator and the elophant tortoise, The for. |mer roars, the latter grunta. |tep to be within the reach of a/ the pleture, where I myself am cong) BY BERTON BRALEY A LITTLE awkward and a little rough, Yet fit to walk with commoners or kings. A heart that leapt at homely, simple things And yet a spirit made of sterner stuff. Wistful and fond, yet adequate and strong To bear the burdens which grim fortune brings; A high tmagination on whose wings He soared beyond the pressions of the throng, HB was the very soul, the sublimation Of that America he died to save; In him we read the genius of a nation, Stalwart and tender, humorous and grave; By Fato unmoved, by love and pity swayed, Masterful, whimstca!—and unafratd! (Copyright, 1924, The Geattie Star) | | SATURDAY February 16th RE-OPENING of the Enlarged and Modernized “Sweet Sixteen” Shop New Spring Stock (Entirely New—Not a Single Garment of the Past Season) DRESSES, SUITS, COATS AND MILLINERY —and such wondrously beautiful Styles, Fabrics and Colors! WAIT FOR SATURDAY, FEB. 16TH SEOUND AVENUS AL Sriinu Santini ‘The misceliennous columns fn the ae retirement fund I do not wish you gen-/ |Memen to tnfer that these taxes all lapply in one place; they do not—w. Howard Hamilton, representing the [friend from Minnesota (Mr, National Association of Taxtcab| Owners’ before house committees on | ways and means. TEXAS NIGHTS | Wo have nights down there so balmy and invigorating that if my Knut-| json) would only spend one night | down there, ho would grow 20 years | jyounger and a luxuriant coat of | hatr would spring up and cover that | ivory dome of his. Representative | | Hudspeth (Dem.), Texas, | lee |Want ads may have something of | wi Interest to you. SEEKING BETTER WAYS It is perfectly clear to every man | ho understands the development of | Turn to them now. modern industry that scientific re-! PRICE All -Hyacinths, Darwin and May Flowering Tulips, Crocus, Grape Hyacinths, Ixias, etc, DO NOT DELAY Next week all remaining un- sold, if any, will be planted at our nursery. - NOW IS THE TIME TO PLANT Fruit trees, roses, ornamenta} trees and shrubs, You may make your own selections at our down- & Co) SEEDSMEN iM ALM ERY ‘ Stewart at Westlake jes Yard—ith and Virginia St. Nurseries at Georgetown TONIGHT! CIRCLES of golden, creamy cheese slowly widening over crisp, square, salted Snow Flakes! Delicious rarebit—token of jolly good taste and hospitable good times! It’s easy for you to serve a tempting rarebit to- night—or any night —with a red package of Snow Flakes fresh at hand. Your grocer recommends a package now! Don’t ask for crackers—say Grekon, pote tog er. ea Agricultsral ond the University of Washington, ood. Seid MM