The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 27, 1920, Page 2

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in attractive and we ad- + cece commence ALL-WOOL gray or tan;.size Sixth Day of the Great THE SEATTLE STAR Cox-Harding Debate FOR HARDING BY RAL/’H J. BENJAMIN ‘The democratic party, aa well as | the republican party, believes in good | | government, and strives to the ut |moat of its ability and wisdom to and to keep the | people natinfied. The democratic party dues the best it oan, and that Is the sad feature of the democratic party history. If the democratic party | coukLAto any better than it does or | better than it has ever done, the re \aailt of this election would not be #0 mportant. Unquestionably the reason for the | failure of the democrati> party is that it is the party of expedience and inexperience, of hedging and! quibbling, of empty promises and broken pledges and extravagance, Tt was typical of the democratic party that Burleson should be given the important office of postmaster Seneral and that A. Mitchell Palmer should be attorney general of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, the greatest democratic party proni- dent this nation ever had, and by all means the democratic par ext man, appointed both Burleson and Palmer and insists on keeping them in oMoce in spite of thelr records of bad government. | bring “good times wigeling and wobbd! Glushing. Cox ta son and Palmer m and Burleson are comeitted te Coz. You can not escape for both Burleson cause, Burleson usurped the power of state rate making commisst clothed in m | the | ae Hf ii ee it i*zk ig i if : : hew ope ing? that | | | 7 i one Ite instance hode—expediency, petency. broken promises, a i i FOR COX RY EDWARD ©. WHEELER 1 am In favor of the election of Jimmie Cox because he is @ positive T am opp to Mr, Harding be. cause he ia a negative I prefer Jimmie Cox to Mr, Maré ing for the same reasons that I pre- fer binek ink to red on the ledger, Leaving other things out af connid- ctation 1 am for Cox because he Gort, Opposed te Harding because he STAYR Yor Com Because he prefers to atep out’ and meet the folks Opposed to Harding because he prefers to spend most ef his time, like @ feeble old man, on hie front porch, and have the folks come and look at him, In favor of Cox because he seems to think the folks are more important than he is. Against Harding because he seems to think he i# more important than they are. SAYS OTHERS DO HARDING'S THINKING For Cox because he thinks and speaks for himself. Against Harding Decmuse he lets oth do hia thinking and talking for him. Yor Cox Deeanse he ty unafraid. Against Harding because he “views with alarm.” Ag his back” and looks backward. For Cox because he represents Progrens, Opposed to Tarding Because he represents reaction. For Cox because he has. sald: “THe ho turns away from the tragedies | and obligations of the war, not con secrated to a sense of honor and of duty which resists every base suggestion of personal or political ex- pediency, is unworthy of the esteem of his countrymen.” Against Harding Deenuse he has said: “Much of the sentiment uttehed concerning our part in the war ts balderdash.” COX CONSTRUCTIONIST; MARDING OBSTRUCTIONIST For Coa because he knows where! he is going and is on his way. Against Harding because he ont in the woods of compromise For Cox because be i & com For Cox becaawe he t “Jimmie.” Against Harding because be le for ‘When I speak of Cox as « positive candidate I have in mind the kind of positive represented in Lieut. Col. Chas, W. Wh@tiescy. Whittlesey, you will remember, te the former commander of the “Lost Battalion,” who, when surrounded by the Germans and called on to eur- render, sent this brief but positive ie not going to vote for Harding. He bas just announced he ts going to vote for Cox, He gives this state ment as his reason: “f don't think that this of any to think the folks are most important ~| TESTIFIES OF HAITI KILLING |General Barnett on Stand in Naval Court WASHINGTON, Oct. 27-—-Prtgn | dler General George Barnett’s charge of “indisertmt ‘lings by Amert can marines upying Maith were baged on his reading of the proceed ings of two courts martial, the form lor marine comme old & navel court inquiry her y Barnett gaid he had no epecific Knowledge of any killings of natives aitt beyond those brought out in art martial proceedings, declared, however, that there was “a state of mind” which he feared might cause injustices to the natives Details of the two courts martial Were not brought out in Barnett’s early testimony, It was understood, however, that they were courts mar. tial of @ wergeant who had been found inwane at the time he ordered the kill itiens without trial, and of under the sergeant. They Were acquitted on the ground that they were only carrying out the orders of a supertor, Chimes Are Changed : - for Dying Woman FORT WAYNE, Ind, Oct. 27-—~ Few understood why the program was changed when Edward F, Yar- nelle gave & recital on the new chimes erected in the Presbyterian church tower. A telephbonie mennage from the beside of a dying woman asked for “I'm going home te dic no more.” 4 ' QUESTION Do you find the high cost of living reduced any? ANSWERS J. L. RIVERS, attorney, New York bullding—I think clothing prices are on the toboggan. I see no reduc tion at present in the food line, How- over it weoma to me that there is go ing to be @ radical reduction from now on MES, MARTBIA PERRY, 1412 20th ave-—A large number of people couldn't buy anything, even tt prices did go down. An awful lot of men are out of work this winter, DR A. R. ROMPKTRON, 705 Tiroadway—Can't may that I've no tieed any drop in prices. Medicines ore stil about where they were poosted during the war, MRA M. HINTERBERGER, 652 N. 824 #t— What? Price reductions’ Not that I've heard of-—and I'm lis tening all the time! KH BR McCLOY, consulting on. gineer, Mutual Life bullding—Food down; steel products are about sta tionary. Clothing manufacturers are quoting lower prices, I understand, and I believe this is reflected in the retall prices. Capt. Pullen Back From Alaska Work Capt. KR KR Pullen, assistant ew perintendent of the Alaska road com- mission, bas arrived in Seattle for the winter, Pullen was famous as a crew man and football star at the | University of Washington « few | years ago. John Wallace Is Rotarian er Rotarian John Wallace was the featured speaker at the Rotary elub luncheon at the Arcade building at noon Wednesday. His topic was the Amsociated Industries and what they are doing for Seattle, is @ little lower; lumber i» going! WEDNESDAY, OcTOR / #7, 197% scheduled to Ge in the electrie crater: that he had been another month to live, he eclobrrated by play © ing the Folliew song, “Oh, Deal Where Is Thy: Sting?” on the graph im bis /cell | \“Oh Death, Where Is Thy Sting?” Choice COLUMBUS, Oct 21, — When George Neichtgr, 9@, Akron bandit, teorned 14 mi 4 be A good adit to @ tableepoonful dally to fruit . Kew Me / j ¥ Now playing with A ‘won- § | derful cast, includ WANDA HAV KATHLYN WI ROBERT WARWICK ceo A little more than @ yoar operation of the league, and I think) THE SOONER WE GET INTO IT) THE RETTER IT WILL BE FoR! THE WORLD. For that reason I am going to vote for that party that wants the league of nations, NOW.) “Opposition to the league of na-| "| Gone ts simply the manifestation of | 4 reactionary epirit with which every great movement in history bas had t contend.” Silence may be geiden, but plenty of silver will shut @ man's mouth et- fecuively. JTHEODO NOt prosecute them for profiteering. Remember, he had_juat promised the people he would erush profiteering and keep the sugar price down. That was democratic party promise-break- ing. But, that tint af of the story. The Louisiana sugar growers sold their crop and imported more een} ~|Cuba. They sold their Cuban sugar may now play cards, providing they | at 17 and 18 cents a pound. Palmer! do not gamble. “A great deal of| didn't prosecute them for that,| money is lost a gambUng,” said one| ther. Then the syndicates that con- | of the trolied the sugar market got busy. | ee You know where the price went. You ED ASK WER Ea LS HS EIPERENGE wenson, The sugat told you there was a shortage. But night and day, and st Says He Lost J.WARREN that was a falsehood, for there was | ’ out of the question. Plenty of sugar. The warehouses | : : P something awful, of Former Self wore filled with it. GOT LITTLE, GROCERS: ‘ ver. that pain | S PAR ie ims © 50 Pounds Since Talijng Tanlac BIG PROFITEERS FREE I worried #0 LE am seventy-twe years old, but And did Palmer make good Nis I just cow feoms ike boyhthd again since wrecked his life. JNow s waiting to signal ‘her dupe to come and tak¢ her away. A tense moment Jn this Paramount Picture in fie gar- den of love! es Malette on the Wurlitzer fa nearly bad aa , back ached 4 AL an Elevator.” comedy Chester Scenic—“Wan , | United States $900,000,000. You helped total wreck, and| pay it. A worth wi my condition that] Palmer played expediency whon he my mind off my| promised to keep the sugar prices y all the|down. He played expediency when he promised to crush the profiteers. Palmer showed his expediency when he failed to advise the buying of the Cuban sugar crop. Not one word has Candidate Cox ever said about the sugar affair dur- ing his campaign. Expediency again; democratic party expediency, Cox, Burleson, Palmer—-all m the same bout. They are, You oan not honestly deny it. They are irrevoca- | bly Joined together in one campaign to perpetuate themselves and their) policies, If you vote for Cox you vote for Burleson and Palmer. If you vote for Harding you vote for the overthrow of Burleson, Pal- mer and the democratic party expo- diency and incompetency. World’s Getting Worse, She Thinks LEXINGTON, Ky., Oct. 27.—The | world’s getting wors), says Mra. Sam P. Jones, widow of the famous evan- gelist. “Human Ilfe is becoming too cheap,” she declared here, ae I couldn't t. ho I had i of money and vern | veral hot springs. Finally, jen 1 gvas told that my time was ort, I started from Oregon to So eattle to make one layt effort to get relief. “While in Tacoma, a friend of mine Fecommended Tanlac, and I believe an firmly as I believe anything, thut it maved my life. I’ve never meen the lke! Why, it has made @ clean sweep of all my troubles. I have gained back at least fifty pounds of my lost weight and my friends hardly know mo at first sight. I am hale and hearty, eat anything I ever could, it agrees with me so well that can’t tell T\ever had stomach trou- I call myself a well man, and WAL , t00, by that, that I haven't anche or & pain of any kind. 1 am & great believer in Tantac, and »jaan Qonacientiously recommend ft.” TamMac is sold in Seattle by Bartell under the personal di- @ epectal Tanlac represen. promise to stop profiteering and to keep the suger price within rea- son? Palmer's sleuths arrested a few street corner grocgra, but the big sugar profiteers escaped. This sugar episode in Palmer's po- Mtical life cont the people of the troubles, time, has put me ba¥ tn such fine ” was the stat mt made re by 8. G. Milie& a retired miner, lUving Oru: fashington. “My health waa so, bad that my friends didn’t bald last much longer, I 1 Shock-a-minute romar.ce of a huma.a dynamo on ik 1 An been E MUSIC IELAND’S ORCHES JOE ROBERTS, BANJO SOLOIST NEWS

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