Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
stowee PAGE 8 rut ALTLI AR : rune R13, 1994 a | The Seattle Star | Whom Do the WV omen Want Elected for President} MRS. EMILY NEWELL BLAIR Vice Chairman Democratic National Committee 2 onmee 4 % A POUT 110 years a they aving a very seriou for pr t t j +. debate in congre It appe d that the cost of the t Ke * 7 federal government had reached appalling dimens: and These te . congress was devoting most of the session to discovering FIRST—Party 1 Sus menkia how it could cut dc the overhead Then, as now, the ECOND—Abilit e the 5 ms before the x a ¥ great burden was interest on war t and tho the revo THIRD—W t tr for the § at lutionary melee was ancient history, its bills were current Ga pam of f r 4 vents government unless i “and ‘ The cost of the federal establishment at that time was reward it when the recor ‘ " t ft H record.s He seven Ilion dollars; something like a third the annual Preaident ¢ ee this f i t t r prof that tax to the ‘atm nary county of today, : eption that ecourred ¢ ir, D t ir. J e 40 Met, Se he past four ye D i can have, ay pati Dn baeeetar ea tt Here’s New U. S&S. Envoy to Japan lion people, and it cost them for their federal government, 0 for city, county and Sez Dumbell Dug: Mosquito Ip) (What Folks Are Saying AIR MAILIS CCESS BUT about $25 a head, and about $ a state government; indeed, the citizen who escapes with a t miserable fifty odd dollar tax for each member of hi family is either poor is or clever in dodging tax tion is greg 3 ‘amily is either poor in goods or cleve dodging taxes. F i in a * So it appears that the cost of government increases in | LOSINGMONEY stuff tg By geometric ratio with the growth of population, and that BY RUTH FINNEY pee when this country has a population of 500,000,000 it will be necessary for the average citizen to have an income of are easy tonal 1 service losing yudget of an orc There were some ten milhon people in the country and . it cost about 70 cents'a head for their government. To- | day there are something like a hundred and twenty mil | } | | | $20,000 in order to have enough left after paying taxes reg sll peg Aes 4 ; ‘ to purchase his annual pair of imitation leather shoes. P gr . / ree ae It might easily be discovered that there isn’t that tion P DI ELMER 80 ‘ ERTS. TENCE 8 much potential wealth on earth. In lieu of the cash, At the end = mouthe 'a) 11 a ie t | DOCTORS * tho, we would have a paper currency consisting of prom Harris & Ewing Ms e fu t, income i cat-m p “ the renu . q i ises to pay; bank notes, federal notes, stocks, bonds, all ¢ nal eri: or Wilh bef ‘sacs OF fal Paes, hee nis tha the gl 5 i the rest of the imitation stuff that serves only so long tine Seataioln Cemeral aaase aie can ices t fund of ie { ] as we believe it may, at need, be turned into gold, Lack Mrs. Emily Newell Blair, vice chairman, democratic na- New says in a report air | 19,6 well, should ; ing this certainty, this stuff becomes a ruble, a mark, a_ | tional committee mail made at the 1 Z. CHAFFEE the average pate Confederate note. 2 first month of the wettest “hha eis the cana a New has sta H di d Ss F. } ©, BASCOM SLEMP PRESENTS ot intensive {raftic solicitation, CBT ORS: ONG ORUEE . . canal aie vento UST as the average man js worth more to his family Calvin Coolidge piled showing doctors, on the average, die 1 urlier than other persona, id to be due to the strain oti what books he | | Years after he has been the route of DAVID BRUCE, | dead than alive, so the average man of Wealth is | in nd pees Je don: “Medic he Bo enorme 2 worth more to himself than he is to society. The woods t = a thle dohe a them, physi 2 . a th at ‘lly j mentally. Doctors, today, ta on Bancroft,|mon w are full of millionaires; most of them busy hiding their taxable property in the deep greenery, but there are few of these who worth a million to society. There are men that are not “worth” $500 at any bank, yet who are worth millions to socie Men with vision who seek truth for the joy of the s h; men in labo- ratories seeking truth; men in slums preaching truth; women binding up the broken hearted; missionaries teach- This is Edgar “Way Down East” fi a h other business and al men, have to live mise new American ambassador to Japan (Under the Auspices of the Republican National Committee) nancial status @ Tho first month of air mail XAVIER SCHWARWENKA, Pol- | br » mu composer: “What is jazz?| Bancroft. His home itt... (A Thought | decidedly succes ter of history that its m [not cowards. Specialists malady of whieh thet spite of the fact that In t | and his son were th r 1 and pitehforks, The pho- s took thi ) nights of flying there 1 ing heathen mothers how to save their babies; frontier ueer te ge pemegan ne omg be of the field j coctors galloping fifty miles to fight death; inventors the al at ri tge farm grabbed Cast me not away from thy pres- ‘al who, from the infinite mystery, catch ideas that other | nea t, the ee : ; wea el elnciie “oan ntr pai ae thy holy spirit men turn into gold, but ideas that, tho defiled in their t ns pees amy hea su non. b i Ge. ‘ede ee pout OP elie workings-out, still make life pleasanter, more enjoyable to arin te mana il Len ry soca hay, mk r = flew t } t JURITY tr is It will always be true that those who seek truth, that as th enid put it in SOF. ONE ee those who prefer service to gain, will not prosper. It will ‘d Seas da than 4 ne on to th always be true that the men who seek personal advantage { wooden next piles of h But he 6 t there, For rief ten minutes the great } will seldom be of service to their fellows. It would seem | advantageous that all of us so rearrange things that the Representa can, of Mans Fd he visit of Henry Ford, shing act was on, the nec- | geet servers should be taken care of from the surplus of the Vane iieees Wien nae” Kan heen Had hoarders, and that all of us, thru our government, should f the old boyhood off, and Impresario iH reward genius, and the truth-seeking, humanity-serving haunts, — - 5 dears ni sale" ply hy i i SRE sto! (Sh credit photographers were $v i ministers, by taking from the surplus of those who profit for’ tats pete af ing grinning like everybody. else from the labors of these. Hoe bounced off the end of the chu: ae a No man or woman who accomplishes something for the | philosopher of Northampton, a | wagon and headed for the White oe + i s oy y privati Py on to the home folk of the | . Howse limousine. a public good should ever know privation. 1: eens lif vrcaiaetad matohaiery: hes, ’40 sickness In the family, was ned—some of It act probably | erplece. The 1 day of heavy @ Tho hay was Siemp Literacy and Intelligence LLITERACY, always widely condemned, is now particu- larly in the spotlight. | Secretary of Commerce Hoover has determined, as a | ult of the report made at a conference on street and highway safety, to probe the facts in automobile acci- ident stepped out his gry bus! gray hat Questions : Answered * into the & i f i J. ha! s the bighe r of ar dents, to find out how many are due to the fact that | white House limousine eth cd egy is the drivers can’t read warning, directional and traffic whirled down the road ‘A. Master sergeant. | Blanchard’s hay stand in signs. | Now along comes the National League of Women Vot- ers, considering how they can get out a 25 per cent in- creased vote this year. They, too, have considerable to say about illiteracy. But they do not claim that failure friendly to vote is a by-product of lack of knowledge. Quite the Behin contrary. trailed They say it is the illiterates who are easily induced to some, batte vote, while the intelligent are apt to sit supinely by, refus- Sidiiee 06 te: mitts iW eroe aah gue ar ———_" ing to exert themselves, except to discuss what is wrong photographers 1 camera aN Seceticuvee y alrrelys Fiat od with politics. It is the intelligent who often fail to back | men, and publicity writers for tlon. by writing The Question up their knowledge with the real power of the vote. Lage vetroncrucde eprocemnion-« | (Raabe 1838: Maw" orte “|| Illiterates drive cars and vote. They must be instructed Aa ever the cows munching in Washington, D. C., and enclosing | ‘ ‘ . two cents In loose stamps for re | so that they can do both of these things intelligently. Q In what r eck in th U. 4. wore the greatest number ¢ | persona killed? A. July 9, 1918,at Nashville, Tenn on the Nashvilie, Chattanooga 4 8. Louls ‘that 87 p were killed , had offered to help the glistening moto er carn, some bright but all jammed men, White ne. The report shows ngers and 14 employca with necr Marmon Owners Endorse Union Non-Detonating Gasoline Remeveee ign! Sew: of:.he, SOEs ply. No medical, legal or marital The intelligent drive cars, too, and do not fail to apply their knowledge when it comes to reading traffic signals. Just so they must take it upon themselves to apply their knowledge in political matters in the only practical way. What's the Use? F IT is true that French scientists have produced “flying bomb” which can be perfectly controlled by wireless, non-combatants in the next war will be likely to live underground, much of the time. Great are the scientists, and, by the time we get our burrows dug, they will, likely enough, invent something to blow us up from below. Bombs from above, bombs outh road. But it was great stuff. jadvice, Personal replies, confi- Cal dismounted at the road- side, took off his coat, and while secret service men made a Plo. human screen about him, donned rere Ty | the overalls. Whilo a few flab- | bergasted tourists who had been | scribing a circle which/passes th headed off by the watehful seoret | {nto siven, pointe? rvice men gi 4 aghast, the 4. Th president strode into the hay didn't look Just proper some point E. From BE as a cent “Mr. President, that collar,” | with a radius equal to BA, deser shouted a photographer, and the collar and hat came off circle. [dential All letters must be | Q. What fs the rule for elrcum points must not be tn ¢ straight line, Connect the points to field. form a triangle, ABC. Draw the But something was wrong. perpendicular bis of the sides The white collar and city hat AC and AD. They will intedsect at a circle ABC, which is the required Making a Fuel for the Better Motors OME of the world’s finest automobile mo- tors are now built in the United States. They Q. What are the employment con- ditions at present in the coal mine of Miinols? Smoking Room Stories are as reliable as a clock, smooth, quiet, flex- ible, powerful. But they need the co-operation of a high-grade fuel if they are to function to full efficiency. We are producing a fuel for this co-operay tion in Union Gasoline. And it naturally follows that this type of gasoline de- livers complete satisfaction in any motor in any car. </ Union Gasoline has the quality of non-detonation which means the elimination of “knocking” on hills, and in slow, heavy pulls, quicker acceleration, and a smoother, more vibrationlegs speed. The purchase price of Union is no more than that for P: from below and taxation in between. We are it. i A. Following {9 quoted from the Why? latest Industrial Employment Infor- | R. COOLIDGE favors the determination of national | ¢¢7 WAS listening to a very earnest | mation Bulletin of the U. 8 De | | legislation by the United States supreme court, | See ete nid, a | Bartment of Labor: “Reporte from which has unconstitutionalized the constitution. baie gine . Neiiant |e ee ie aie ENGL BTodn It may be a severe blow to child-s aves, underpaid |voies at'the conclusion of his very is constantly Below what tt was a women and such, but Wall Street probably likes it. eloquent speech, ‘Who is there who| year ago,” - will lift a volce against the truth Bet aot of my wore Q. What is the best way to stop “Just then a donkey outside the|a cherry tree from having sprouts hall ¢ vent to one of those plere-| ruin tho ling ‘Hee-Haws.’ The laugh was, of! 4. Keep the lawn mowed close, | course, on the politician but not for| and, if the sprouts are numerous, Jiong. He shouted, |smoker, “who cried out in tlon is at a low edd and employment appearance of my lawn? jdig them out. Doing ao will not “Yes, I knew nobody but al harm the growth of the tree it ass would try it!” ! self, Many Test Motors Employed In our modern research laboratories we make many tests on various kinds of LITTLE ol’ buggy, one-seated and frail, is the only one known ‘round| — FABLES ON HEALTH | motors in the endeavor to improve Union other good gasolines. 4 ‘ the place. As droopy-head Dobbin is switchin’ his tail he {s trottin’ a} x s | Gasoline and Aristo Motor Oil. lazyslike. pace. BEWARE OF B AD AIR We compare other gasolines and other It is economical in mileage so it actually costs less than Right close to the curb goes the shiny ol’ mare and {t's horse-sense that Olle with aur owe products in thess same it would if it were a cheaper grad : makes it that way. What safety there is, Dobbin knows that it's there by ———$___/ | motors and make notes on every result per grade. ® the curb in this speed-crazy day. |«6[)ID you ever stop to consider {worked for him, It has been gradual | Shown, 4 e Thus we are constantly watching for “ possible improvements that we may make in products that are already up to the minute in perfection. An auto horn blows and the horse perks {ts ears; then they droop, just} the stages man has passed and subtle, for he went from the out: | as suddenly down. There still is a spark of the speed crazy fears as she|thru in order to reach the state of a|doora into nd then hurriedly | travels around about town, house dweller?’ the physical diree- | built lean 4, cliffs, huts with Forgetting ol Dobbin is sentiment robbin’; how easy we all can forget.|tor naked Mr. Mann a hole to abins and houses, How changed is the scene from when Dobbin was queen, but her spirit is| “Most people ti | “And reaching a supposed civ hangin‘ on yet. houses always wore, and so the Mized state in houses, he stood for (Copyright, 1924, for The em and dodge the much-needed | such things as tenements. | ou (doors. “The result is all the train of evils “Now, a8 a matter of fact, man is} that come from bad alr and indoor | biologically an outdoor animal, In- | life } |vention of houses made it possible] “About the only way we ean in| for him to live in all elima yet any measure overcomo the evil Is to this indoor life has been at the root} sleep. out of doors, when possible, | of much disease and keep.the houses well ventilated: “Nobody will ever he able to figure | get more out-of-doors outings and | how much woe this indoor living has practice deep breathing.” Union Oil Company q Union ist, Casolirh