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% FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET HIS It is admirably adapted to $1.95 yard. Odd “Sample” Garments Reduced NCLUDED in this as- sortment of Sample Garments, are Knitted Caps, Women's Sweat- ers, Bathing Suits, Petti- coats and Overalls, all at reduced prices. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Children’s Half-Hose Reduced to 15c Pr. 380 pairs of these Rot! top Half-Hose, in Black only, to sell at the reduced price, 15¢ pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE DOWNSTAIRS is available in heather mixtures of ( Green, and plain Reseda. Exceptional STORE 200 Y ards of 54-inch Wool Coatings Offered at a Very Low Price: The Yard $1 95 Wednesday good 12-ounce woolen loosely-woven effect, is called “Toile de Laine.” in the fashionable sports coats and suits, and anard-blue and y low-priced at DOWNSTAIRS STORK THE Boys’ Union Suits Reduced to 35c EVERAL different styles in these Boys’ Union Suits, in & broken range of sixes, in cluding 26 to 34, reduced to BEE suit THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Accessories Reduced DD ITEMS in Neckwear, Vetiings, Rag Rings, and & variety of Tollet Articles at reduced prices. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE “Sample” Undergarments 1ERE are 800 Under garments for women and g@hildren included in this un derpriced offering. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Tumblers, 6 for 25c ge ea Glass Tumblers in plain heavy style, for every-day use, unusually low-priced, set of six, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Tourist Vanguard Now at Auto Camp BY SEABURN BROWN From New York to Blaine; i i £ cele li H i climes, of the 1922 sea- surprisingly distant homes. it 40, all told, are now at the aT i t Most of the autos lining the boule vard claim home garages within a radius of 100 miles. These, purely pleasure cars, are impressively equipped for short trips, with tents on the side, beds of the collapsible variety, stoves, seats that can be transferred into a bed by lowering hinged backs, and so on ad infint-} tum. But among those present yester. day stood a humble, unkempt fliv- Did You Ever Try ver; not even « five-passenger lizsle just a roadster, No special equip ment. was visible. A «mall, very amali tent, parked beside the ve- hicle, lightly furnished, housed a man and his wife. “Somebody out for the afternoon,” was the idea adduced. “How are the roads?’ the quiet looking tourist was asked. “Well, quite good from Portland north,” he said. “Did you drive up from Portland | North Germany. #0 early?” “Yes; and the weather of the past three days has been enuine relief, up the roads.” “Across, Wyoming!" “Yes. In fact, the going is quite tough in the early spring from the ) Ume you leave Ohio until the Coast | highways are reached, | “‘Ohior did you say?" | GRAVEL ROADS IN WEST | ARE GOOD AT THIS TIME “Yep. The Middle Western states aren't bad at this time of the year Not so much paving, but the grav eled roads in that part of the coun "SALADA matural leaf Green Tea? It has proven s pleasant revelation to thousands of those hitherto China Greens, R. & H.C. COOK, EAST 3383, ELL.0350, DISTRIBUTORS used to Japan and" \" ‘American Beauty” ELECTRIC IRON The best iron made The ONE iron that will give the same satisfactory service after years of use as upon the day you purchase it. Its slight extra first cost is offset many times by its sturdy reliability. Sold by Dealers and Electrical Companies Everywhere. Manufactered by American Electrical Heater Company, DETROIT Oldest and Largest Exclusive Makers. Established 1894. | | 207 University St. Germany’s “Northcliffe” Is Title Given to Hugo Stinnes BY MILTON BRONNER Europe Manager for Scripps News paper Service BERLIN, May 30 In London | clubs they love to tell the story of) the man wh 1 he read lots of newspapers 60 he wid have all| Kinds and shades of opinion before | making up hie mind on public qui tions. Asked what paper he read, he | replied: | “On weekdays I read the solid! Times and the aprightly Daily Mail) and the hustling Evening News in| the afternoon, On Sundays 1 the breezy Dispatch | He was amazed when bia friends | greeted his statement with shouts of laughter, One of them entightened him by explaining that all those papers belonged to Lord Northelit | and expressed his policies. j There are many who say that! Hugo Stinnes, Germany's business | king, is the German Northeliffe, only | more so, ‘They will tell you the time | is rapidly approaching when it will) be difficult to know whether one is} reading an independent opinion or ‘| bonst read | Stinnes opinion HE CONTROLS MANY PAPERS People ordinarily ~ well informea | vortously estimate Slinnes ownes 12 papers, 40 papers, even 120 papers in| many, and still others in Austria, | They bewall the growing loss of free | newspaper comment in Germany | Labor leaders tell me Germany, | since 1870, has always in this regard been worse off than almost any big | nation in the world. Bismarck had his press which told | the public what he wanted it to be- | lieve and fought the causes and stateemen Bismarck hated or feared, | With the tremendous expansion of Germany as a business nation, labor | leaders make the fiat annertion that | coal, iron and steel interests openly | or secretly secured control of many | of the big influential newspapers of Germany. Their object was to sup-! port political parties and leaders who would give them the kind of laws) and tariffs best suited to their in| terests People who know Stinnes well tent} me the ability to mold publie opin: | fon thru ownership of newspapers was probably only a secondary| thought with him. For Stimnos, | business ty always busines. He is} 4 practical man. He came into the publishing game first of all because | he owns coal mines. The bridge! from coal mines to newspapers is made of wood ; HE PURCHASES BIG FORESTS In hix coal mines Stinnes needed great quantities of wood for shoring Up seams and for many other kinds jof construction in the pits, To assure | himself a steady, ample supply of | cheap wooed, he bought great forest | jtracts in East Prussia and Finland Then his restless brain got busy | jagain. He had the timber and he/ had the coal, Why not ship the coal | to where the timber stood and man: | ufacture valuable wood products— cellulose, paper pulp and paper? 80 one fine day Germany learned that loads of Stinnes coal were going | across Germany to Bast Pruosia, where, in Stinnes’ mille, trees were converted into Stinnes paper and pulp. Later he bought « big concern in Koenigsburg and another in In his own neigh. | borhood of Weatphalia there was a| ae ee Ala | | | It was pretty tough coming across!try have solid bottoms and are less! Germany and so long as open es. Wyoming, when the rain gummed tiresome to drive over than is asphalt} pousal of royalty would throw him | But there are other outlets for print or conerete paving. “That is, at this time of year. believe that, when I left Bingharm- ton, N. ¥., in the first week of April, I started @ bit too early to get the best of it in the matter of roads; but I'm on the Coast at the right time 1c pted a clmuret and | nhs drag. He looked at it ister lovingly. ' uch to look at, but we—that is, the Mrs, and I, passed some nifty sixes with her coming across this re public.” \s TTLE AUTO PARK MAKES MANY FRIENDS With the Keators are Mr Toledo, 0. and Mrs. |} Castello, of who don't |think they have done anything out of the in touring from their own ound #0 early in way back yard to Puget summer uuriste from points throut We ington, Oregon and California are |taking advantage of the admirable |accommodations of Seattle's auto | park | All report excelling touring condi | m the main arteries of the state and Coast highway systems, “The recent sunshine has made the unpaved roads a bit dusty, but except where detours are mad asary by practically every | in excelent, or, at least, fair hape was the universal answer thruout the camp to inquiries: Every tou interviewed had a good word for the spirit of Seattle in | providing the excellent facilities for |tourist camping that the Woodland park establishment affords. | EXTRACTION | FREE DAILY | Our whalebone plate, which docs not cover the roof of the mouth if you have two or more teeth. Natural Rubber, set of $6 00 . teeth..... Gum Lyke Rubber, « perfect re production of the buman gum, set GOLD CROWN } $4 BRIDGEWORK .. Most of our present patronage is recommended by our early custo- mers, whose work 1s still giving good satisfaction. All work guaranteed for 16 years. Examinations free OHIO DENTISTS. Opposite Fraxer-Paterson Co THE SEATTLE STAR 0 Za | mill which manufactured fine note; Stinnes controls the bank or the! paper, so he bought that, too, mill or the mine. BUYS THREE IN AUSTRIAN BERLIN PAPERS | JOURNALISM Then it struck Stinnes it would) He has also become an important be a grand idea to manufacture factor in Austrian journalism, where Stinnes paper into Stinnes news-| only recently it was reported he had papers, So in quick succession | purchased the Kite paper mills, This he bought three Berlin journals. His| concern not only had three paper first investment was the “Industrie mits but four Vienna newspapers— and Handleszcitung,” which, as tt# the Extrablatt, the Mittags Zeitung, name indicates, ix a businegs paper./the Winer Allgemeine Zeitung and It was the best in Germany and #0 the Sonn and Montage Zeitung. The an important acquisition for a bus! Pxtrablatt ix an illustrated paper ness king, His next purchase waalwith a large circulation and the the smaller “Deutsche Warte.” Allgemeine Zeitung is a leading| His third acquisition was the most! Bourse organ. So in Austria as in| significant of all. He bought the|Germany, Stinnes now controls aj} “Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung.” the |leading business newspaper. paper which in the old days of the) When a man owns a string of monarchy was the semiofficlal OF-| newspapers, it is natural that he gan of the government. What it! should think about the sources of! said represented what the rulers\their news, In other words, he be Latrigs ie ge Its readers bd wi | comes interested in the press associa very largely he once upor-a-time of tions that supply news by telegraph. fletal classes who are true to the ‘The first in "which Btinnes Invested Yallst cause and hope for an ultl-/ money was the well known Dam mate testoration of the Hohenz0l-/mwrt bureau, which had three sepe- lerns. |Pate services: One for papers which Stinnes belongs to the German! support the German people's party; People’s party. In fact, he is its|one for the papers which support | chief financial backer. He fills its'the democratic party, and lastly « campaign chest when an election| service for papers free from political | fg fought. And the right wing Of/ leanings. This bureau has now been the party is largely royalist. Ger| merged with the Telegraph Union, mnans who belong to the democratic parties which believe in republican fostitutions tell you Stinnes him- < s nelf at heart is a monarchist, How. | ING amen over, tnat max be, he in too ehrewd/ "saving the Wobd kn the coal and & business mah to come out in the} open for the king business so long)/*h® paper and the newspapers, | as tho republican wave lasts in| Stinnes has gone almost as far as it] is pomnible in the newspaper business. invested money. paper, There is, for instance, the |book and pamphlet trade and also jthe general printing of Natiets, cir-| wiars, catalogs, billheads, ete. Bo news | Stinnes formed a new concern under | hin own name and also bought two jfamous and old established eom 'panies—the North German Book & Printing Co., and the powerful Bux- into conflict The meine its step. with his workmen, fact is the Deutsche Alle. Zeitung certainly watches It confines ftself largely to giving the news. If the is colored to suit the interests of Sitnnes, it is very cleverly done. In a time when German papers are almost as small as those of enstein Press, which ttwelf cx ‘ule France because of the high cost of Phsaryg : & number of subordinate concerns. things, this great Stinnes sheet The eminence attained by Stinnes gives abundant proof of the full! “ M is obvious. No man in Germany ts| ve coffers back of it it te in such itrategic pond Cie to fi | the largest paper tn Berlin and it/rucne public opinion upon corpora, | spends much money on apecial! {uence public opinion upon corpo! ecial tion laws, taxation, tariff and other telegraphic service in a period when the rate of foreign exchange against | Matters that Interest big business, If in which Stinnes is also said to have jf) REDERICK & NELSON’S June Displays of LINGERIE . White Cottons, Linens Will Begin Thursday Morning —and Will Present Many Oppor- tunities for Money-saving in These Lines Mysteries of Radio Explained by Expert BY K. L. DUNCAN ‘Director, Radio Institute of America In erecting or assembling an ama teur wireless transmitting station, and Bedding June First ». | telephone it Simply throwing a few switches, the! yune 4. is suggested that the vacuum tube | Perator may change from speech to} be used for all-around efficiency. All records made by amateurs in COURTESY TO BE OBSERY Kiwanis Club Sponsors F to Win Tourists — Courtesy week will be |__ This method of transmission also permits the use of a combined radio By | and telegraph set. Sponsored by the Kiwanis [telegraph code. Pacific Northwest, “© There are three general types of | the vietin’: teehee sles fram outaide/ > wants to he can concentrate @lthe recent transatlantic test were | Wave which may ve sent out by the| week” is designed to foster & worth their actual weight| Went of printed matter —news-/¢rom stations using the tube. jtube transmitter: continuous wave | friendly and helpful spirit that in gold papers, pamphiets, books, magazines} 4 tube transmitter will cover |(C i * rgyee dpe bce Wave | attract and holt the tourists a i _p.{ such as never before has been at/three times the distance of the old |. . and telephonic. posses beginning | DANe been told that Stinnes owns | the dixsponal of one man in Germany, spark set of the same power.| ©. W. can only be received by sta-| Dene: Ate ae z tron every co erat Paper orc) it’s no wonder that in newspaper| For sending out all lengths of un. | tons using a vacuum tube receiving | to arrive. many int yr oe pera tll ye circles they now call him the King/damped waves the arc method, the | @Pparatus. “There are several thousand closed a deal for two in Laipsic,;° 10% and Paper | Alexanderson alternator and the os-} Since there are a large number of |Wanians in the Pacific North Whenever such asvertions appear | (oprriaht 1922, by N. HA. Ser ioe, Inc.) |cillating vacuum tube are used. But/amateurs using crystal receiving |®74 their contact with in the German press, they are im-| ——~-~ the only practical form of undamped | sets, the antenna oscillations of ajand associates and others: mediately denied by | the Deutsche! Municipal B h wave generator for the short ama-|tube transmitter are modulated by | Sothl mane: Siereaee = ck Allgemeine Zeitung, ‘This paper per unicipa eaches teur length is the oscillating vacuum | “grid chopper” which is a rotary in- | jack pose, ade Pirie the K ists in saying t yy j . | tube jterrupter designed to interrupt the - “The f : only the diwee Ha tig eof ee Opened in Advance *_ | grid circuit of an oscillating tube ap. | ental idea of the program ist only the three have mentioned. S| imately 1,000 time: cond, | make @ special effort to Stinnes’ secretary earnestly told me| With Jupe Pluviue away on an} proximately 1, imes a@ second. : This o ts the out ‘ations | tt the tourist season is now © the same thing. To which other extended vacation and Old Sol glow-| is converts the output oscillations | seeing and that many thie amet Germans reply that the ownership ering at Seattle real angrily, thou into a current with the same recep-| aociaing factor in the Sanne aches | f the many other papers may not sands flocked to the bathing be in Stinnes’ name. But they say Memorial day, The park board made he controls them just the same, arrangements to place life guards at Sometimes they say a bank or a/Alki, Green Lake and Madrona} coal mining company or a_ big beaches, altho the swimming season] mill controls the ‘paper. And doesn’t open officially until the clos-| — mw (ing day of school, June 16. AMUSEMENTS | — PANTAGES Boat Sched ules Matinees 138. Nights 7 and ® Fre n Dock-Foot MunionSt =—SAVE MONEY TACOMA SAFTY - SPEED-co AF ORT Se FOR ROUND TRIP 5,000Used Tires All high grade selected casings, thoroughly inspected and VICTORIA. B C PORT ANGELES - STRAIT POINTS guaranteed Fybrie Cord ie wx. i adie ies c,d DAILY BX. SAT, MIDNIGHT 80x31... 3.50 “ $4.50 Up 32x34 a ame SAN JUAN ISLAND POINTS aix4 450", Bead 5 3x4 x BELLINGHAM - ANACORTES PORT TOWNSEND. RAIL CONNECTIONS AND MILL PorTS HOOD CANAL PoINTs 12.00“ All Other Sizes in Proportion MAIL ORDERS ‘areful attent paid te Mail ders, No deposit required PikeStreet Tire Shop W. 0. STANDRING, Propr. 1026 Pike St,, Cor, Boren Phone Kiliott 0446 NEAH BAY & WAY PorTs MERS & SCHEDULES PUGET SOUND NAVIG COLMAR DOCK. Fo Saturday M Nights at 8, te 82.30 he tn A POPULAR MATINEE TODAY Decoration Day, 50c t >1.0v "The N Rerden's Mee 26 Corunsal Seenen, 2,500 Coxtumen All-Star Cast ef 150, Including 73 Winter Gar “THE GLORIOUS FOOL” with EXTRA—AFTERNOONS ONLY LARRY SEMON In “The Star Boarder” jen Beauties Ie S PALACE HIP NOW PLAYING Amerten’s Greatest Song Writer L. WOLFE GILBERT Feature Photopiny: wiek and | tive efficiency as a quenched spark | wet, termed I. C. W., and may be re- ceived on either a vacuum tube or crystal receiver. | Voice signals either. gained by tourists comes from the human contact he receives in @ | strange city.” | The Kiwanis club 's working with 4 the tourist bureau of the i Ina Vacuum tube transmitting set |Of Commerce in carrying out the a low voltage source is used to heat | Plans for “Courtesy week,” and the the filament. When possible this | COOPeration of all cltisene 6 ae ; | voltage should be of alternating cur. | ~ rent, for that tends to prolong the/ rent generator. life of the filament. 2. From a rectified alternating eur- A high voltage is used to energize | rent. ; the plate circuit. The current for} 93, From an alternating 4 the plate may be obtained in three| source applied directly to Pig ways: and known as the self-rectification circuit, i are received on rom a high-voltage direct-cur- | In a new package that fits the pocket— At a price that fits the pocket-book— The same unmatched blend of TURKISH. VIRGINIA and BURLEY Tobaccos @ 10rec sume