The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 15, 1922, Page 12

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PAGE 12 Disclaiming any affiliation with the supernatural, Alexander, “The Man Who Knows,” appearing thia week at the Pantages, claims his feats are but the result of a property _ | trained mind, How fur he has pene Economist Asserts Policy Troubles tate” must be left to those who ask and receive answers to their ques tions involving matters pertaining j affaire. | produces photographs of anyone sug gested from the audience. Most BY EDWARD M. THIERRY WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., Aug. 15 America’s tariff policy ts the big- gest thing troubling Germany and Austria, says Dr. Josef Redlich, lead: | dng Vienna jurist and former Aus trian minister of finance. Redilich, one of the lecturers at the Institute of Politics in session here this month, made this the most vital factor of world affairs when he gav fm an interview these forecasts World economic peace cannot vas, altho no one seema to touch It between two seal 4 by a comm 0. The mystic master ts accompanied on his tour by three charming girls, who are adopts at giving interpreta tions of Oriental dancing. An onpecially interesting vaude ville program surrounds Alexander. Complimentary to the convention jof veterans this week in Seattle, the theater produces & prologue in a war: <1 slates which are tee from the audi bers of Roosevelt post of Veterans of | Foreign Wara, PALACE HIP econstructed from the log books of surviving ships and portrayed by model vessels, history's greatest sea conflict, the battle of Jutland, comes to the Palace Hip in film form to- day for a four-day run in connection with the Ackerman @ Harris vaude ville Dill and the feature photoplay, “Silent Years.” Promising an unbiased portrayal of an engagement belleved by many to have been the turning point of the war, this photoplay, which Is tn- terspersed with many actual battle scenes, In said to be more thrilling than any imaginary contest ever put on the screen, In it Britain lores 14 ships with » tonnage of 114,000, together with 6.000 men, while Germany's cost is 11 ships, totaling 67,720 tons, naval strategy ozs * 30 x 34 32x 3% 32 x4 33 x 4 32x 4% Hx 4% 33 x5 35x5 int, because there cannot posst- bly be financial help under America's tariff policy. “Our wish is for co-operation, not charity. Under existing conditions, . 0 one can say what will happen economically in Europe.” Dr. Redlich said he thought there |» Was little prospect of the Rhineland | Tepublic scheme, just presented to Premier Poincare by the French parliament, being worked out. “It is the same old dream,” he} “France SASLERB RLBRAR 8 tria. But I do not believe either wil Be effected. Austrian peasants long | wanted a union. with Germany, chief. | ly because the German mark was much better than the Austrian crown. | But now the mark has fallen so low} they are cold to the idea. MONARCHIST FEELIN STRONG IN GERMANY “I believe both Germany and Aus tria will continue as separate repub- Nes, altho in Germany the mon-/| archist feeling {s very strong. “The German republic will endure, based on the organized working Classes as opposed to the nobility, the upper middie classes and the pro- fessional classes. The way is not | trated the demain of the “fourth es. | to business, love and general world | " Alexander amases and startles by Central Nations) Acs; wre tense 3 | The re 1 quired image appears on black can. Alexander also gives the spiritualix. | ; Uo alate-writing Cost, causing written | words to appear in mystio manner | | time setting, participated in by mem- and | required before the first work could 5,400 dead or missing. The produc:|be begun on filming an event which tion indicates that the finest sort of |took place May 21, 1916, more than was used on both! six years ago. _ ‘AJAX CORDS sus 30x3 30x34 REDUCTIONS ON ALL OTHER SIZES Quality Never Higher —Prices Never As Low Insist Upon Ajax From Your Dealer AJAX RUBBER CO., Inc. 1720 BELLEVUE AVENUE Joining up with (he cooties was 8 fur different matter in the old days of 1917 and 1018 than It ts | today, according to the enthust astic members of the Military Or | | W. F. Eighmey, supreme} |seam squirrel, Military Order | of Cooties, V. F. W. der of the Cootle, who are in Se attle for the 24rd annual encamp ment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. During the war days the cootle was no respecter of persons, and jglamour of gold lace and Sam | Browne belts affected him not at all.) | Everybody had ‘em and everyone, | from the highest ranking general of flcer to the lowest buck atched for ‘em and cursed ‘em. xiden, Three years of research by Maj Gen. Sir George Aston, K. C. B., the | noted British naval authority, were ‘See Em Wiggle Wednesday THE In those days the cootie was a democratic sort of fellow who longed to burrow into the warm, inviting hide of the doughboy and remain there permanently, But now the ry cootle, hia weaker wartime her, routed by frequent applica of salt water soap and elbow greane, ty an aristocrat at heart and hie friendship is gained only after many trials and ordeals, This will be amply demonstrated Wernesday night when the national officers of | the order preside at the open air! and initiation of 100 can-| “worateh’ didates at City Hall park at 8 p.m. All of the national officers of the | order, which t# the fun lodge of the Vv. ¥. W are in Seattle and have quarters in 4 at the Butler hotel, wher eruits are being enrolled dally Supreme Seam Squirrel W. F. Elighmey of Brooklyn, N. Y., presides as national commander, and is as) sisted by hie adjutant, Supreme in! justrious Hungry Cootle F. J. Hig. | o#, and the national quartermaster, | Induatrious =Hard-bolled | . Grimimig, both of) Combining the fiendish In- gcenulty of the Spanish Inguisi tion with the refined torture of the man-eating cootie, an inter esting Initiation has been prom- teed those who witness the fee tivities at the park Wednesday night. Veterans of all the ware of the United States in which troope served on foreign soll are included in the order, among them Col, Huston, part owner of the New York Americans and etrong contender for the nation al commandership of the V. F. W./ The most isolated member is George | h war vet and keeper at ¢ @arichet light station, Alaska. His appileation took four months in reaching the New York offices, it ts declared. ‘The new officers of the order will be selected Thursday night in Roose velt hall, 1616% Third ave. New and Lower Prices NOW IN EFFECT AIDA Cord and Fabric TIRES ROAD KING (FABRICS) REDUCTION size $1.60 30x 34% 32 x 3% 3lx4 MARA wWwND RISSARR 32x4 33x 4 Hx4 32x 4% _AJAX PARAGON (FABRICS) \ NEW PRice REDUCTION $.60 $ 9.75 10.65 SEATTLE ALL PRICES INCLUDE EXCISE TAX NEW rRice $12.50 15.70 18.65 20.85 4 21.95 5. 5 7 REDUCTION $1.25 3.70 22.40" 26.90, -25 aa and there will be fights, but| there wilt be no overturning. “Hungary eventually will become a Monarchy. Opinion is practically unanimous for it. The problem to be settled is who shall be king. “The legitimists want Charles’ eld- est son, some want Admiral Horthy and others want some one of the Hapeburg princes.” Dr. Redlich’s lecture course at the Institute of Politics is a historic sur- vey of “Nationalism, Imperialism and Internationalism in Europe,” Cotton Export Rate to Coast Is Upheld The Interstate commerce commis. sion has dismiaved the complaint of | Galveston against the export cotton Fates to Pacific ports, according to a decision received by the transporta- tion department of the Chamber of Commerce Tuesday. Galveston complained that the ex- port rates to the Pacific coast, which @te designed to equalize the thru! charger to the Orient with the Gulf} route, are discriminatory and preju dicial, and requested that a differ. ence of at least 60 cents from Texas| deintx and 60 cents from Arkansas| Btat } ana Oklahoma points be established. Boilermakers We to 70%%0 per hour 1 snigiteinsneameyfiatiennmeminide Passenger Car Men. 0c per hour i] Marking Autos Has Freight Car Men. .63¢ per hour | Helpers, all classes. 47¢ per hour { Saved County Cash i George T. Erickson, member of the / state legislature from the 42nd dis. trict, will seek re-election, he an- nounced, Erickson, author of the Jaw regarding the marking of public owned autos, said the measure had saved King county several thousand dollars in curtailed joy rides at the } expense of the county. } 3 Erickson ts a merchant of Rothell. He favors new narcotics laws and re- peu! of the poll tax. | Machinists Blacksmiths Sheet Metal Workers. Electricians Stationary Engineers. WANTED For Shops and Roundhouse RATES jonary Firemen. Mechanies and helpers are allowed time and oneh worked in excess of eight hours per day, oa gedise APPLY ROOM 3028 ARCADE BUILDING SEATTLE tebe e ewes wares 700 per hour . 700 per hour .100 per hour We per hour Various rates arious rates SEATTLE STAR JAMES “I've got mine, and it sure is a dandy—and spare time,” says James Scrimgean, of 318 N. 102nd st., Seattle, SCRIMGEAN DAY, AUGUST 15, 1922. OASTER WAGON Equipped With Roller Bearings Rubber Tires and a Roller Brake GIVEN TO ANY You Don’t Have to Pay One Cent of Money! BOY THE STAR has presented COASTER WAGONS TO 259 The Seattle Star It Is Built Just Like an Auto—It Runs Like a Limousine on a Boulevard. YOU’LL WANT ONE ON SIGHT! OY OR GIRL Who Secures Ten New Subscriptions to Follow These Instructions---Get Started Now SEE THE WAGON AT THE STAR OFFICE Here {is your opportunity to secure one of these brand-new Coaster Wagons without one cent of expense. All you have to do is to get ten (10) new subscribers for The Seattle Star. You don’t have to collect any money, nor make the delivery of The Star. Just get ten (10) of your friends or neighbors who are not now having The Star delivered to them, to agree to have it delivered by authorized carrier for three (8) months and to pay him fifty (50) cents a month for it. Have subscribers sign subscrip- tion blank printed in this ad. Be sure and get phone numbers when possible, so that subscriptions may be verified at once. Do not wait until you have secured all ten of the subscriptions, but bring or phone subscribers’ names and addresses to The Star as soon as you get them so that delivery can be started at once. Use This Subscription Blank or Call at the Office and Receive a Book TO SUBSCRIBERS I hereby subscribe to The Seattle Star for a period of three months, and thereafter until I order same discontinued. Circulation Dept. THE SEATTLE STAR I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 50 cents a month, I AM NOT NOW G THE STAR DELIVERED TO ME. NO, Ante e ee eeneenene 7th Ave., Near Union Ts & dec ES

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