Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE 6 fHE SEATTLE STAR ——— , 1924 oa —= —$___ Somebody Must Be Talking About Him ‘) |What’s Ahead for World Flyers! { HOW MY EARS / | If Taxes Interest Y ou | a res the about it. The report states there are in the United States about 82 billion dollars’ worth of wholly or partially tax-free securities, Four and one billior f these are owned by per sons having inc over $10,000 a year, business cor porations own 12 billions, and individuals having incomes f : is) ‘ S y mn r Y oa Oa Pal below $10,000 a year own the rest—over half the total } / MF W HAT YOU NEV ER Senator Norri§ says this feature is the most encourag = - f ‘ Y nao ~ ing part of t report, If anyone to own tax-free s¢ . \ LU}, se ( AN KNOW curities, he is glad to know the common people have a f f } } he fair share in such benefits : »\\e \ BY ALBERT APPLE h Be « 5 7 That business corporations own a large proportion of them he thinks gerou SCIENCE To return to the r t, it is interesting to figure how q \ - t r n ‘ + 1 ae : much money the government led to get in taxes because : = ‘ [i : ‘ man Knows i no wie f part of t he hs | A New Theory of tax-free bonds held by rich people and corporations : _ 1 During 1 the tax-exempt interest received by indi- me . : : ? pon ord. viduals whose taxable incomes exceeded $10,000 each is | - 5 ———— } ; = | f a sbular hypothesis to answer fig estimated at nearly $176,000,000, Loss to government in : Z \ ) chet ee po ° i. peat : ; nd Payne taxes, about $58,000,000. 1. : i . _ . 3 ‘ 1 4 ea vrme ot bn Apri Fi atinas on 5 In addition, the government lost about $44,500,000 be- different line ¢ kr € wit tut we een destroyed cause of tax-free securities owned by corporations. This makes a total loss to the government from this source of $102,500,000. This isn’t the whole story told by the federal trade P a mess al commission's report, however. other ce fe n t eomediin " © hi and higher as the traf nw area, | Lruth About “The Other Woman’ || .:rz cues | emstnka vitae [coe e ora ——. Tax per capita highest in Atlantic, Rocky Mountain and Pacific Coast states, but most bur BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON densome for agricultural communities, particularly in the dister al shererd ; dge » epee ang oie PORE porie ae wheat-raising states, “which suffered from an unprece- wives a penet i ure full o te t a nks’met fed ast Ayo dee yea begs del arin Haars SE an 0 = seks peg dented price decline for their products while the general nting f ‘ that t ters the most popular th * h been found out the a everal yea r ually it ated about the sun and price level for the things which they purchased remained able ig dhe th te oke a9 avound tha subijeet or the lovit tude 6 ¢ | man r t lars 1° torets angguag unless the | beca ewly-born planet. ‘This “Any further reduction of the present burden of tax- Q wonde orywhe t avera t be | the « the aitterdnt tore Lainie eed gh a rity to | Mathematicians paca Fi ation should be adjusted especially with a view to the de- leryinings oly bs a ny chor , e bs t ¢ - , | bs pressed condition of agriculture,” the commission recom- chat anaa wha doce nal os aheeyD trephcberyp toa —pananypae ap ‘ CASK Deca” “Ware the y | © supers that it ts unlucky mends. | good husbands into a snare. TD domentic hearth, t t of have © excuse vA cpa meant y aired them to be mar May originated with Senator Norris is not satisfied with the compromise tax : : sen bill as it came out of conference. He mourns the loss of his publicity amendment, also the amendment which QUESTIONS would tax corporations by u sliding scale on the same AND principle as individuals. a “A flat tax of 14 per cent on the incomes of corpora. | ANSWERS tions favors the big business and is too high for a small TY aa BO 97 shower fo axe business to pay,” he says. tion by writing to The Question he men have shift ' he yo ; © an ex == reau, 1822 N. Y. ave. Washington, : yea ae et tira D. C. inclosin c ' pon th alder cha but the mar. War and Dan Cupid ‘martial chvion ‘sae S¢(HRISTIANITY,” says former United States Supreme 3 requests can- Court Justice John H. Clarke, “cannot survive an- capes other world war.” | * c yo movies, men 4 Divorce in the United States has been greatly on the |!" faferal | 208 chase ‘ ey succumb increase since the war, due—in the opinion of bench and | pea his « trie bc eee bar, pulpit and press—to an almost universal let-down in | rayner, Be 1 feast no rt a a > : iss ee morals. | ; } ais face tion goes to show “Increase of divorce in the United States alone means | : | she gave a pa : Ssdeapr pie mpprenigel ctx nothing,” you say. “It’s our lax laws. Easy divorces. |,,0. aig weight ae aes Oi eacrig dn ean Pesaghitorye, What about other countries—the European countries ‘ ¢ i) salt’ oF -eiger halt, ways to. theet’ thé anh half way to meet the ‘ which really saw the war? e © ae pna of the vie Smoking Room All right. Let’s have a look: ere cece Stories In France divorces rose in one year, the year immedi- | ‘4,7°10'°4 DY water which weil! ditui : e ately following the war, from 7,851 tu 11,514. su , si! : pz ae : : ies Nas In Germany they went from 13,344 in 1918 to 36,542 ‘told one about his chit } in 1920—considerably more than doubled. 2 Se anh work, Se. predoey es elbtachad ia) In England—staid old England—they rocketed from [°"\"") fog pre J ° t pr ently 1918 to 7,044 in 1921—considerably more than | 900.000 pounds sere pra F mn te hey | University: “Because of the we tre i 1923 ego = ‘i : ¥ war the world became a welter of In Switzerland they increased from 1,699 in 1918 to : w edtothiy « Tat win ig cclne Bite Skies 2,241 in 1920; and in Sweden from 1,098 in 1918 to 1,455 Go. tie r H's repre * : pagan combat” a must combat | two years later. jsent in the term 4-H Club? geod ones ers for nic ae 14 . 1 i : : ‘ raining of nead ds, healit wou ish her. Daugh Be " j And so on, all along the line. Only little Norway seems | gig pearl wre. the ee eal tee ha ad Tare cobain REV. J, ©RANK NORRIS, the Reco: Ange to have kept her head. She scored seven less divorces in | clu» ey ee jt fice nd much Texan Bearcat": “If we have no 1920 than in 1918 : aa © wife ame | !nfallible Bible, then we have no in-| So war does desolate the hearth. 1 @ What aot tes gether Oi ric URE Put yourself in the place of the big fire surance 2 = ates are in the Cotton bs A . » a Our eyes fill with tears as we gaze upon the windrows | Belt? “My dear, didn't 1 tell you not |_, REV. KARL BLACKMAN, Kansas | companies. What information would you require of mothers’ boys mowed down in battle. Pity fills our |.,.°:.Y'rainla. North Carolina, South! to kisn any’ more ot the young |CHY: “Most of the trouble with chil before making yourself liable for the payment of hearts nigh to bursting as we watch the cripples pass. raberepeminas | nn knots eget» Li inde ered eee paren Or hee aa oe Oo etre hundreds of thousands of dollars? ah But we forget the dead loves, the demolished firesides, | Louisiana, Oklahoman, Toran and| ‘rained ae Be se ere linet the tae | rani In type the crippled souls, the havoe which war wreaks on that | issourt Seema tain a cols i earate vee oe | pees pokeetish byes of prop institution we call civilization—our homes, our morals, | Fie JUSTICE BENEDICT, Brooklyn:| ey So insuring. You would want to leam our passions, our ideals, our religion, our amusements, | ® Wat were the Huguenots? Sez Dumbell Dud: | ihe aelbstlon cr tive tnledaten'er the something about the kind of person who owned and our very habit of speech and thought. A; Brenoh Proteteatts of the-deeh the detection of the misdeeds of the | me eee eget ie | ordinary: offender against ordinances | the property. You would use every available W. IP. FAUNCE, Brown id The M@N})\ aha regulations which involy i tion estima‘ Speed vs Control 2 What causes the bubbles in a who se fia. , re te bine Lae de. { o Id to pa fe Hs, e id ‘ glass of water? 7% ures do no t ie ae: 4 business, [PEACE officers and traffic experts are coming more and | oy RE ee lie got his ater ener aa atciat aed formation is filed. py prssaerm Pu = fe au ore 40 ev Ew ties its not so much the speed as the! $5 8 y pane the | eaee In 8 this effort to avoid al h he goods we sell. es ontrol of a car which governs automobile accidents! © What effect hax singing on the OUP 0, t€ |) DR. HENRY VAN DYKE, wr and shad: aract you woul keepin, muerebandiae fs sound and fatalities. Witness the statement of Sheriff Matt Ste growth of the hair? ps fel od P® bathing||the stone aN on ante ‘ uf 5 sete, cm id papier ee wich that 50 per cent of the auto accidents are caused b A. None; the hair is part of the beaches. | Never decay, but it is no place for a} AoW See COR: something you “ tet? Y POOL | outer skeleton and cape 5 e something you can be a8 brakes and cars “bumping” into each other. lpasnaheer the naila, A Nach is solid, Eee cere. That is one of the developments of scientific sure of as the pe ks Also witness the results of the American Automobile as-|ad contains nelther nerves aha a be nor —. a underwriting that is tecting every sociation’s survey of brake laws in the United States. Con-| ed. There can be no gebdntage LETTE FE . MA prot ig honest necticut, the association says, is the only one that had a defi-|™ Hie process, . F ? nite requirement about brake performance. | i P . j 4 ‘ A car, traffic engineers say, can be just as safe at 25 or 80| raat tt th "eine for gluten | Vv RiIDG E MANN | This advertisement published by the following miles an hour as at 15—if the brakes are working properly.! 4. One cup water, 1 cog white, - Agencies of old line stock insurance companies: When Washington and Seattle get a workable status re-|/ cup cream, 3 cups 40 per cent garding the control of the car—then perhaps the annual toll! /“‘" four teaspoon ‘nat, 1-2 June 30,1924 JOHN DAVIS & CO, JOHN A, WHALLEY & co. of blood and property will be cut down. | veaat cake 4 cream and allow Dear Polke: { 807 Second Ave, MAing9l | Colman Bldg. MA inSH5 it to cool. When lukewarm add the |dlssotved yeast cake and the salt Well, hore we are, ready to go | CARTER, MacDONALD & MILLER C. B, DE MILLE FABLES ON HEALTH —_4t stowiy aif tn flour, eating on our vacation, The ue pas bee EL lot-8690 | Haller Building MA in fold it in. Gradually add the ree group, reading from ENRY, BRODERICK, Ine. CONSCIOUS BREATHIN oa 1 should be thik top to bottom, con-~ jaecaeisth’ Varese SES EIS me a Etter, tiff enough to drop from the | PYRE RT ratey rk sCoxsciovs breathing” was alabout the benefits of conscious | 220" Leal esroly' ddd: tender tice stitute the whole T. J. CUNNINGHAM & CO. hae ae 5 iin pace to vas Whe ‘doude i Pack: King, Queen, K. QTD | Railway Exchange Bldg. MA in-1943 BURGARD-SARGENT CO. I] | “On your way. to the car in the|for 60 to 60 minuten ee ot Trey and Deuce, H. EB. BRIGGS & CO Se ce mut c “As Jong as there is air and a per. | Morning. 1 the doctor, ae | ¢, I 208 Marion St EL iot Vit 7 son's Wungs are all. right, “he'li| Your Innes ER hic rans REY al Qi call myself the King ROS OL iot17 syjeetoia aie ; breathe —whether he's conscious of it| dozen times, ‘Try idiaulok | AG Konkan aa eee ell just for a joke, The Queen | STUART G. THOMPSON CO. co Os yi GROCKET SS CO. an ee a: % nn ee fi ‘cathe —guap, #0 t0 eben, analy tdtows (natruotiony thased on cone AP says the kid must be the | Securities Building EL 1ot-6236 y oY ; nich "In "pe rua y thru the nostrils, Exerelse principles formulated by Ata were not we'd suffocate in our | ¥°Ur diaphragm, nae Boseea heady, Sud? canna = Dede because I raise hin, | PRANK 'T, HUNTER CO SOBER A Rae 0 nce il u'll be surprised how your! with a method of treating: atten athe The Trey 4e one more than Railway Exchange Building MAinga7t | bs ©: Smith Bullding Ke pre, there's a proper way to ‘ mentaply. As presented in Mre.|\| Phole by the Deuce, Gorn 3. In | SMITH & CLISE, Inc. x D », ne, ‘q ete: y man's way, The Eddy's “Science and Health,” Chri, ee tion will Impre t) tae 5 ria ’ ' i lazy man br enough air to Han Kolence is based on teachings|| “A COMBS We haven't decided yet 400: Columbla Bt fe Stuart Building MWA in-7062 Keep him aliye—ana that’s about all.[ new man of Keripture which it er wh \ ke MIL. ety tRacaR Ble Dita’ oe edhe which it interprets, ere we're goin wa. Then the doctor told Mr. Mann ¢ : Pac ianex aisles 4 a t Re T know of—and one of the best." In diuine metuphyatcn whieh, hata] %2 89 %O Some Place close, like ARTHUR S. MORGENSTERN JAMES CREHAN & CO. Inc. : \thecelole mad alehen Te aoetanee at Scotland, The Queen prefers eone~ Dexter Horton Building MA in-2285 Walker Building MA in-53%t IGhated. THe wotentiid Polotton ohn shine swoll - like dried apples and || | DAVID P. EASTMAN to God. z 1021 Third Ave, | sWie:''¢ | We'll see who 1a bose! dimer eee THIEME, MORRIS, HANSON & ROWLAN, Ine. A, The “reservoir” where the anow rey meee Bie |« collected, and the “dissipator® where the ice ia melted term Mr, Mann, of Seattle, had | breathing.”* never heard before, | | WILLIAM H. RITTER & CO., Inc. BA st-7600 MA in-2661 Broudw and Pike