The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 24, 1924, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1924 SSH A Political Candidate With Strings | Attached Has His Drawbacks , | The Bie Questio Before wy onference pees ee ee ee Cutting Society 400 to 300 | Will Be Done. How? Don't Know; Here’s How It oe) The Seattle Star _ Tiring of | Husbands IWNS where women own all the property and are per mitted to divorce their t tired of them. These are discovered in the wild parts of Western ) India, by Mrs. Ernest Thompson-Seton Divorce mills certainly would work 24 hour Kied a similar system in A But a day if we verica. The ab to live to gether without getting tired ach other is the real test din t ‘ t | Of marriage. When you're dead, you're a long time dead - F curiosit x So with marriage. It’s the most important decision of ¢ t f = One's lifetime. Young people should venture cautiously, Mellon’s Mistake INE of Secretary Mellon's most telling arguments against high surtaxes, when he was pressing for adoption of the Mellon tax plan, was that the number of big taxpayers was falling off each year. He showed that the number of people who paid taxes Ton incomes in excess of $100,000 was smaller in 1920 than in 1919, and smaller in 1921 than in 1920. But then Mellon stopped! In the official “Statistics of Income for 1922,” just given out by the treasury department, it is shown that in 1922 the number of taxpayers who paid on incomes in excess of $100,000 was 40 per cent greater in 1922 than in 1921. Here are the figures for three successive years: 1920, 3,649; 1921, 2,352; 1922, 4,031. In other words, the high tax rates did not prevent big tax collections when business conditions were good. In the years following the war, business fell off and natural- incomes decreased. Much of It in the Boy the national open golf championship, Cyril Walker idrove to the purviews of a small lake and took his ashie in hand. Sir,” said his caddie, “there's a bit of gale blowing. midiron’s best.” Whereupon, Cyril used the midiron ind won the championship. ‘The writer would love to meet that caddie. He must E part Solomon and part arch-angel. There are none like him and some are his antithesis. here was that period, in the writer's career, when @ cute little white sphere reposed on the bank of a in the contest for the Cuss Club cup. “The mashie per,” advised the caddie. Mashie it was, and the disappeared, absolutely. No splash.in the lake. No im any of the trees nearby. Seemed to have burst a soap bubble. Caddie even searched the ground . sed over since the last hole. No ball there. And | [jul'e @ : ad cere die threw down his bag of tools, remarking, “Here’s probably will not leave Brough yale I quit. No fee wanted. Any man who can do i August 1 wa with a mashie is haunted.” It wasn’t till the club- delay will enable des | &t B was reached that the ball was found in the golfer’s slag ane poo leg where it was rolled up at the ankle. All of | fuder to get into prearranged goes to show that championships sometimes de- positions. dq upon having a caddie who knows what not to do, ‘ ey dista Cyril Walker's, doesn’t it? recagee oa Eres planned in eight jumps, the Poor Rich Man which would be from Greenland to Indian Hart AKE my advice, and, if you ever get the money- Labrador, a distance of Places in Your Home making bee, don’t let it get you.” Lester T. Bar- miles. Other stopa’ Wore. to wealthy and retired St. Louis business man, is | farce tsunds, two stop in toc, | the mae peut ing. The bes got fe ad is sting has made him | tana and two in Greenland | detac planes there, unhappy, he candidly admits. Lieutenant Smith, however, they a y that they | a “kid” Barker was like other boys. He read books | Tei jitt he sinns to teavo ct | Mee ae ado? behind sched he found joy in the companionship of his playmates. | he grew up and went into business. He made his . ea deliberately and observed them rigidly. FROM would fiake his tile and then play. His business Letters <OM Readers cc FABLES ON HEALTH ees [ VACATIONS { { } { le matter er, in the wld be many 1 re The liberal soul shall be made fat****—Proy. xi:25. Of courne every of es can’t play In learn the le letting his m Preparing Home Stretch for U.S.World Fliers ) Wangenazen July = 22— UNIVERSITY DIsTRICT e4sth st AT BROOM SeaTTLe Srores Mad teveat oh terdione. MDENTICAL AT BOTH STORES eee : : : 7 STAR fea Mette “bare: thous: wives pave. were filed All letters to The Star must have name and address. | We have sold thous- You cannot judge this black and red figures—figures that told the dail B a LIMES S | ands ose beauti ; x . H oe, ne anata me | MY-MOTHER | CAN WE ‘SING? |B] | S1%.°t thew beautiful wonderful instrument | Who always seems so very near? Editor The Star-—Can the Amort-| Victor Pianos through- Mother, my mother ad riches—great riches—at last were his. Then he [wo always casts out every fear? |" People sing ped out of his business and sought the happiness he Mother, my mother. |auestion, because on July 4, I hap sure his money would buy. Who tlways seems to feel the woe,| pened to be in Woodland park by the VERY LOW PRICE at which it is now selling. Its beau- Iam asking this out the Northwest—no instrument has ever me now the jolt of raw discovery that money is not EL pale angie aoe neg i, | tending: the exercises, a part o} | y F d everything—that happiness is not a commodity ea were community singir J} failed to give the ut- tiful design, rich tone, easily purchased with dollars laid on a counter. Mother of mine, my mother. eh eadnahivint ig anigs Aad itarsd ep, j ; x i id overed that he had forgotten how to play, that he | who is it loves when Iam glad? ea wre distributed ty the. “poy most satisfaction, and splendid construction, find no pleasure in a book, that he could not sit Mother, my, mother. Scouts, | among Victor owners P good play, that he did not even know how to mix | who ts it loves when Lam saad? A song leader was there to lead the are all that you could + i 4 Mother; my mothe People in the songs, but alas! all in , bly with people Who 4s it, when I tret seems gay, | ain. Not five per cent of the vast} are many people of desire. See and hear . discovered that he had sacrificed quite all of the Who's always ready for fun or play,| Crowd even attempted to sing. r elements in his character to the pursuit of money. | who goes about like a sunbeam ray?| Having sls d now that money makes him unhappy. Who could it be but mother? eal octets “J worked too hard,” says Barker, sadly, “but not isons real musical ability the “Victor” for your and keen judgment. VICTOR PIANO—STYLE “BE” own satisfaction. r Who see to understand a boy? id started nging, but all of 0 o- erosh i at ne oo esr ms fal but too te to Seats tty mothers ohaed avail, the pe fe ony looked i oat rma ‘or the best things that money can buy. Who loves me more than any Joy? |in surprise, some even winked the Whe lesson my experience has taught me is that | iste my met aay, |Smechn oat se | WELL Known Standard Instrument eping your shoulder to the wheel and pushing ahead, | And every night whose hands £ hold?|of those that did sing, sang In Ge 4 ng neither to right nor left, and so forth, is not a |jer jove to me Is priceless gold. |man ‘T heard a couplo sing "Hell dler of Proven Quality at AN EXTREMELY ite 2et of directions for making a success of life!) | Guonam socket WRIGHT. |group war ungiog "God sav. the LOW PRICE and ON EXCEPTIONALLY jt were they as honest as he is. Money is nothing yApin T axk the question, “Can the EASY TERMS— thief of the head and heart and soul and fellow- WHY IS THIS American people sing?" | some o} he numerous readers | of human beings. THUS? ot he tae thie? aap lcht ee This remarkable offer is made for a limited time, and ny r rich men attest this truth by conduct. Bar- 3 ia subject? Bea ics “ts acioas. ints Wada: Foie ik ll ra ats etna vino every instrument is a brand new Victor piano with the ot Chapa soil ince” anitala A941 Ist. ave, N. B. well known Victor tone that has won the hearts of like to reply to same, Of all the music lovers everywhere. It is an offer that makes it easy for any home to own a standard piano that will lying, instituting stuff I ever read, |this takes the cake. © They hire men ' SW _-oll tn Go % |not on the civil service Mists of eligtbies because they > ph Jenough applicants, says Mr. \h What Folks Are Saying be a proud possession for a lifetime. 2 | ARSE eh Ra a Td SAY, utt. The commalasion cannot force! ie ang resen rice s ‘ i ir Folks: \applicants to apply for civil ser- av. u |. WIERS, Mont. t t t t Wh h T ‘The ships of war have steamed away; they seek a further vice rating, says Barkhuff. ‘That's|l@tr, N. J: “Good peopie alone e e owes a tc ts Eporthern shore. And soon they gather there to play the game too bad there are no idle men in| ould bri insure a good world. We . t of modern naval war. But still we have a sturdy ship that | Seattle, Pe ttenegnave.the right tnatttutions t l I t H te B S iguards the shore with watchful eyer—for day by day, within Recently the comniission ndver-|OF Interrelations of men.” eautiru nstramen as ver een JOO Her slip, the fireboat Duwamish lies, tised for 600 laborers to take the] wy. ‘With guns that bristle fore and aft, her fighting soul is Jexarn and not one-third of the need- L, BRYAN, prosident Indiana mever dead. By day or night this loyal craft awaits the ed men applied, the article reads. Se beta “Why ‘have mon suc. | Dell, “Full speed ahead!” A fire call—she's needed now! A |Phe' facts are, over 1,200 men were |y, ~ a In dealing with natural moment—she has started out; and soon the guns that examined. 1, myself, standing over|iinersn NOt I dealing with each | grace her bow—her water guns—begin to spout! {300 on the list and rating better eNeths } a> aba Me ate ts lost, no matter what the eaudin al aa ‘ one of! SAMUEL GOMPERS, A, 1, of 1.| our 6 kno’ lamage moments cont; she'y fii? re tl president: “Hsuentiaily labors Go| Mageheaded out to sem (From day to day, trom your ry ; rent call mands are not politieal’ | EVERYTHING PERTAINING TO MUSIC © thru rain or shine or calm or squ e's waiting there, beth <P is agelek kL patel alert ta hear and heed mute fire ea ee OMG PT 1 | WHOLESALE MANUFACTURERS RETAIL ‘The ships of war have itt 18 now; they go to play the |Jvervice meant something, 1 had no| Sez Dumbell Dud: 1 aera zerE TT AC ‘game of war, But, with tegiar fighting prow, the old trouble pleasing contractors and} i "118 WE CARRY NO STENCIL PIAN Duwamish guards the shore! She fights the gravest tights others with my work, This thing| Tt is hard 1L PLAYER PIANOS, — E WE DO AS WE ADVERTISE lof Peace, while battleships protect the const; they both will has gotten #0 rotten, it's really to believe} | RUMENT A STANDARD MAK BRING THIS ADVERTISEMENT © fight till fighting cease—and who shall way which serves us ltunny, That 1, if ean't own there ar »|| ony To Ta EoD it? any real estate in I wonder how long Heattle citt: = yens are going to support these i} Cirridge Momn, tee rena, moon 1 ightl| 1519 Third Avenue E. 45th and Brooklyn 816 Nob Mill ave, night. oe s } a — t germs ini DOWNTOWN STORE UNIVERSITY STORE kisses on a

Other pages from this issue: