The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 17, 1922, Page 2

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Drive Lead th The total subsertptions to be J quested will to % | |The $200,000 nds 10,000 inine | Would Station Committee | amount ot t which will direct the campaign, be | present a little proposition regard specializes in rats jing tourists at the Interclub Coun noon at the F M not be tem excep! case © re ‘Hostelry tore “sont seas se | On Information at Park quiring the additional money ‘4 rhe Hockenbury System, [ne.| Members of the Gyro club wit) 1 gee | 7 0,00 Bonds to FRO Ne otolin tor Monday hotel projects. Injcil lunch on orized; $270,000 ‘the tact two years the system | Masonic Club in the Arcade build ear - Ifinanced 15 hotels. ince Janwery | ing Stock Issued } last, money has been raised by] The proposition was suggented! _ ‘Hthe organimation for nine hotels, one | first of all by Hal Cunliffe, & mem hme pln for finance: jot which was the new ‘Tacoma | ber of the Gyro Ciud. He noticed aoe mew cap ao M PRS! | hotel, and another 9 $1,535,000 | in Woodland Park one day last - : acing hotel in Syracuse, N. ¥ | week many tourists who .s¢emed an funds penwe Hoekenbury — wil on the |net to w the whereabouts of Laround eight axsoolates, all experta,|the city any too well, He talked a of directors oF thO! during the cempaign }to them and learned they did not BY Mot at the Chamber) qe next meeting of the board of | know a great dea! about the high Briday and, scperted fa) 99 will be hekt ‘Tuesday or | ways and boulevardy of Seattle. He Ort at Hts COMM PALLOPS | Wodnenday, when it ts expected | talked the pial Paw and incorpo tion. | 45 the committer to select a cam. |elub, who decided to appoint them: | 43. Hockenbury, premitent) oie. committee and on Metropol | selves as @ committee, or as aev:| he Hockwbary tn Building Co. will. re-} ral committees, to be stationed at} cos to other members of contract, Fee, nathormity knoven for! oo, | Woodland Park at different times mn mesanine cee aod | with information regarding the city direct the campaign. OH " Now, according to A. L. Scott, | . systam, which has China Trade Now [secretary of the organisation, the| in Hiaeeteburg, ia. @d the recent $1,000,000 “Tyco. te @ suceeesful con: 4 felub will present the idea of tourist | } OM Upward Trend | committees to other clubs of the | SHANGHAT, June tee-tmporta ae ‘ }tion of American goods into China} ‘Th* clubs, undoubtedly, wit! co stock in the ee | in expected to break all records this! Operate in the organization of Wel divided lato ‘ae 7° |come and Information committees the par value of ° to be stationed for tourtet conven: | be issued, All of ibe }ience at Woodland Park thruout the | esesee t;, | O.E.S. HEAD |... ne — & w& as i aly? pi ol } ' tii + i HELENA, Mont.—John N. W IMelenber, pioneer livestock man, dies here. | = < ] w . & 2 ‘authorized, dated §. is oeacienieapmmae ee. The iswee in to A bug whieh preys on the potato | mortgage of bug by sucking its blood has been of wperty discovered at Kingston, Ontario. HH : ' by i 3 auttgage bonds. of submeription pled se is) ws which will pe ovide | Ain lots of $104, and | “Phereof. Each $100 sub- fs one bond of par value R& Tle remaining 410 for stabscription of one ot par value of $10. | mttwcribed wil! be | per cemt August 15, 2923. | cent ort the 15th dag” of | A class of 21 disabled war veterans is walting impatiently at the University of Washington jurday, ing to be done with them. } A year ago they were put in train. | *leral board for vocational training | ie severally matare. not paid whan | | draw imterest at 12 per! annum unt paid. | o om widl allow to tite | given jobs. Yesterday their training | fended. No jobs are in sight and the men do not feel that the year .of training has prepared them for hold- ing positions. | Of the 21 men in the class, 17 are married and 14 have children. For tie last six weeks they have been trying to get the officers of the fed- eral board for vocational training to give them « definite anewer as to . what ts to be done with Mrs. Minnie E. Miller of| they have the board, the sof-the Order of the}’ aut Eystern Star, meeting in’! they must take care Seattle. Installation exer-| os. ‘sm | ly a few of th eas B oe pegged | ewehhdhagen t= teieiag os the oak ~ ay eevivlyi NOW PLAYING - First National Kinograms Pathe News @Ce@RO0 Raymond Griffith Noah Beery Ethel Grey Terry NOTICE— MACK SENNETT makes very few six-act pictures, but when he does produce one the public may readily assure itself of seeing the “Comedy King's” best work. George O'Hara AFTERNOONS 25¢ and 35¢ NOW PLAYING Paramount's love romance that starts in a London ball- room and winds into Africa! “The Woman WhoWalke Alone’”’ None whom she can call her friends! None who will clear her name! Nowhere that she can call her home! Yet she is innocent! So she gives herself to destiny and Becomes “The Woman Who Walked Alone !” (Silt NID First National Kinograms “COLD FEET” Another of the good Christie Comedies er Named! THE SEATT BOY SINGER || Robert Murray, 13, Tacoma, phenomenal soprano singer, who will appear at the Metropolitan theater here Tuesday evening. Murray sings five notes than Ellen Beach Yaw, who |reaches the highest notes at-! tained by any woman in the world. —Phote by Colter Zabel 21 “Trained” Vets wee Waiting, Waiting! Diseontent may be heard on every - Heveral men who were to be train ed as aneayers have been given o few Preliminary courses in chemistry, and their training ended Frifay tmg at the university under the fed.| They aay they are not equipped as Middleton; best chemists or aasayers either, with the idea that they would be| One man wanted to ve a foreign !oW rose, Mra. M. Muller | trained an bookkeepers and would be | trade accountant. During hin course three roses prise was awarded tol cotton lace curtains were made in he has had three advisors. The first second one thought that foreign trade was the most important. As a result, he has achieved nothing. Another, who wanted to be an aseayer, was given accounting and while he was in training, his adviser |jieignts Indien won the table display.|to 60 per cent minimum. made him take two courses at once, one of which was the prerequisite of of |» higher) AUTOISTS 60 TO ~ PARK: OPENING Caravan Stages Parade in City Before Leaving | Following » spectacular parade on Fourth ave. at 10 a , day, 0 aw thelr radiators in the dire of Kainier occupants might be national park, ¢ present at opgning ceremonies for the 192? season, After brief stop at Auburn, lemation wan! prenentatives of the 4) Club, the caravan pro-| Tacoma. The Heattle | motorints parked their care in a #pe cial parking space on A #t., between Ninth and 1th aves, and at noon | were the guests of the Tacoma Com: | i mercial Chub } The representatives of Seattle and other cities, including Yakima, Ev | erett. Bellingham, the Gray's Harbor nection and Portland, were scheduled | to particly oreted aut he streets of Tacoma before the departure for the park at 3p m Dinner was to be served in the Na tonal 1 k Inn between 5:30 and 1:80 p. and the «peaking program ls ncheduied to begin at the latter | hour, The speakers will include Gov | Hart, Mayor Brown, of Seattle, Frank Waterhouse, president of the | Seattle Chamber of Commerce, J. F. |S. Lyle, Tacoma Commercial Club, Maj. Griges, president of the Rainier Park pany, H. A, Chadwick, chairman of the Beattie joint efvic committee, Irvin W. Ziegnus, chair man of the Tacoma committis, and T, M. Martin, general manager of the Rainier Park company The re Program was soheduled for £:30 to 10 p.m. A fireworks din-| play and dance were to be conciuding features j. ‘The contending forces in the saow- ball fight Sunday morning will be led by Gov. Hart and Maj. ©. H. | Mulr, commanding general of Camp Lewin, Walks in the park and an | indoor baseball game will be staged later in the day FLOWER SHOW PRIZES GIVEN Prisen awarded during the Fifth Annual Flower Show at Fauntleroy Symnesium were announced Satur day an follows, Best white r Mra. J, Muber; best pink rose, Mra. i. W. | red rome mweep- letakes, Mra. Florence Johnson; yel- | The best) | Mrs. A. P. Johnson, who also won| jand last advisors thought that stress |'h* rose basket prize. | | should be laid on accounting, and the | Mrs. Frances Billings, chairman, | won the garden bouquet, Mre, Muller took the annual flower prize, while Mrs, R. Hallack took the perennials lJoe Davis had prizewinning wild flowers, the decorated spray was won by Mre. Muller and the Arbor} | Mrs. Billings i given credit for | |beautifully Aecorating the hall beard, but the complaints are not) heeded. One four-page letter con-/ {taining specific constructive sugges | \tlons as to Improving conditions was | sent to the supervisor with no re. | | multe, ansstijpatcsipdiien | Rattroad service between Moscow } versity who do not feel that their | ditions improved, have sent several |and Kiev, Ruswia, has been reduced comes are being dealt with fairly. complaints to the supervisor of the'to one train a week “THE Dot Fartey OF NEW YORK” LAUGHING and A SI —with— Milton Sills Dorothy Dalton Wanda Hawley SECOND WEAR SENECA First National Attraction THRILLING ACTS 100% Courtesy, Music, Pictures Northwest. cannery ship family to man the MALOTTE onthe WURLITZER |moing to have to pay [than 2 per cent of the total con- ACK SENNETT’S w ruavwc Compe | ROO Eddie Gribbon Kathryn McGuire The Hero of “’Way Down East” and “Tol’able David” — RICHARD BARTHEL IN FIRST NATIONAL’S “SONNY” . For Every Mother’s Son— For Every Son’: LIBERTY NEWS | Richard Seattle Shriners leave for San Barthelmess : children ing has made another drama that rivals wrist park, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1922. (VET Now neve aca’) BRIG CHARGE OF MADHOUSE VET HOSPITAL Disabled Soldier Convention Will | Ask Government , for Employment. | BY JUDGE ROBERT 8. MARX | National Commander, the Disabled American Veterans of World War. | CINCINNATI, June 17-—The Dis |abled Am Veterans of the 7 World War will hold their second national convention et San Francie Joo, June 26 to 30 : This meeting will be the greatest gathering of wounded and disabled heroes ever heid in America, At it will be laid plans for bring- ing real social service and relief to America’s wounded and disabled vet- lerans, to the end that not a single man who gave his most priceless possession—his health—to his couns try during the war shall ever suffer or want. The convention will demand imme- diate action to get our mentally dis- abied comrades out of contract asylums, like Longview, near Cin- cinnati, wher soldiers are mixed with civilians and tubercular pa- tients in buildings #0 overcrowded that more than 200 patients sleep om the floor every night. Immediate relief for men who lost thelr lungs tn the war and are now hundreds of them—walking the streets of Western cities in search of proper hospitalization, will be inded. Mise Louise Northrup, 1901 Fourth ave. N.,in the act of signing up FE. A. Swift, Jr., 601 84th ave., for reinstated war risk insurance. The veterans’ bureau in Seattle is now actively engaged in « campaign to convince former soldiers of the value of bringing their insurance policies up to date by an exceedingly convenient and comparatively inexpensive arrangement recently authorized. Great success is reported from the week's campaigning. Photo by Price @ Carter, Star Staff Photographers New Tariff Will Make |i Lace Curtains Higher | wicca et ocaus iti carried out to such @ point that BY W. H. PORTERFIELD dends and making the manufactur-|reai rehabilitation will result in the WASHINGTON, June 17 Madam, | erserich. But they want to be rich-| disabled veteran being able to secure have you a pair of lace curtains in| Soe the new tariff on lace bag Plo gt Aree adequate compensation for men who SALEM, t's of-|are not receiving it, and to straigh- Bo have nearly all the several ficial lead over Charles Hall for re-|ten out inequalities and injustice in million other families In thie coun-| Publican nomination for governor | compensation ratings. |said to stand in recent state pri- Extension of time for filing claims next time you buy you're martes at $21, following canvassing | 0m the pert of tubercular and men- a lot more| beard report. tal cases will be urged. —— Preference for disabled veterans will be demanded of the government in giving employment to men and women in public positions. The convention also will urge the expenditure of millions of dollars already appropriated for new hospl- tals and will vigorously condemn past delay and inefficiency in pro- viding these hospitals. the house? You have try Well, 1922 Record of Pedestrians Hit by Automobi BOB ce er, comin ae shoulder when hit by an auto driven Brother! of : \by Harold A. Hauff, 17, 4531 Sixth St. Andrew Meets ave. N, E., at Fourth ave. and Pike) wn. grep, annual convention of the ote Sereter, Brotherhood of St. Andrew will be 299.3%" being hit by an auto/ held in Seattle, August 30 to Septem- driven by W. G, Nunn, 126| ber 8, when more than 60 bishops money for ‘em. Why? In 1914, the last year for which wtatiotics are available, over $6,000, 600 worth of so-called Nottingham the United Btates, mostly in Penn- syivania, and sold to folks all over the country. Under the Payne-Aldrich tariff bili of 1909 they were taxed at 50 per cent ad valoren. The Under. wood bill reduced the tariff to 46 per cent. ‘The new tariff bill raises the tax What foes that mean? Simply that you,/ Madam, will have to pay not lees than one-third more for the ge oe curtains you buy. Second ave, 8., Thursday at Western|and dignitaries of the oF To van out the cur/@¥e, by the Pike place market, church will be visitors in the city, taine made by cheap foreign labor?| Frank Mallery, 70, 6749 Mary st. Not a bit of it. The record of the|8s taken to the city hospital, Woman Elected tariff commission shows that less 300-2: Lund, 9360 53rd ave. 8., f prota Sacha yey uaae | Head of Church sumption in this country was im-that he struck a man at 10th ave. ported in 1914 and practically none|and Pike st. The man, who refused EXMOUTH, Eng. June 17.—De- since, to give his name, was crossing in| von Free Church Council Federation No, the industry ts firmly estab. the middle of the street and Roaamne | hee elected Mrs. C. P. Pewberthy as lished, i paying handsome divi. confused as the «uto approached. {te firet woman president. Topics of the Day Snub Pollard Comedy Mildred June William Bevan Charlie Murray COLISEUM ORCHESTRA Under KAY Overture to the Opera nel from the. Opera Mr. » . Bolol EVENINGS seclteae” BORe es ness B35¢ and 50¢ (©) “Fandango” from “Kastadiantina,” Grand Walte Espanol . NOW PLAYING The Playhouse of No Regrets MESS Pathe Comedy and Scenic 's Mother— “Tolable David” wae? Richard Barthelmess _ and Margaret on Sonny” @en*-nswrosde

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