The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 17, 1922, Page 9

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j ’ BY JAMES M,. COX Ex-Governer of Ohio eee FOURTH ARTIC “CAN = [as many inhabitants as Switzerland. | kronen, AUSTRIA L She ts larger in area than Relgium,| The fundamental thing that ts) Can Austria ive? That is &/ Holland or Switzerland, In fact, | Incking la an established and recog ital question now, By thie | her territory exceeds that of Holland | nized authority. geant, is she a logical national unit? and Belgium combined, She has| One-third of the popttation of Aus: yThere aro those who believe that} no credit, Her financial affairs are|tria ts in Vienna, which ts located In survival is impossible, Many Amer/a nightmare. She is not properiy|the northeast corner of the coun: | feans have expressed this opinion. | orgunized for the collection of taxes. |try. The municipal and provinelal Mow fur they have gone Into the) Question, I do not know, These! hopeless observations, as printed, | have not been accompanied by @nalyses. An tnvestigantion of these Goes not justify the sentence of @eath which has been pronounced. | Many belleve that the welfare of The Austrians would be promoted — Self-Consciousness | Spoils Evening’s Fun | “Hello, | Molly! I suppose you had | @ Wonderful time last night at the Theater. Wasn't last night the night you were going with Bob, his mar ried brother and his wife? | “Yes, last night was the night But you know, Mary, I didn’t have @ very good time.” "You didn't? And you had been | looking forward to it for weeks.” “Well, it whe all due to my glothes. Bob's sisterin-law is too | Pretty for anything and she had on | the loveliest clothes. I felt sort! @f shabby and self-conscious It ts | & terrible feeling and spotls every: | thins.” “Of course it is @ miserable feel tng. I've had tt myself, but I think We often exaggerate our own shab- “They were very nice to me, of Course, but I felt it just the same. | In fact, Bob and I are invited up to! their home for dinner next week, | and I am going to have a pretty ew dress or know why.” “So you're getting desperate. If you are afraid you can't afford tt why don’t you tn cate Cherry’s They do have beautiful clothes and You can buy them on credit. They @sk @ payment down and then allow one six whole months to finish pay. ing. ey are In the Rialto bide, te! tween Madison and Spring, Just over || Take elevator.” Advertisemen AMUSEMENTS THIS WEEK epheam. so VAUDEVILLE the Pig'n Whistle. Maus Bt THIRD OF A CENTURY ANNIVERSARY WEEK ! ustria, Credit Gone, Debts Piled High, Called Financial Nidhtmare' if she were annoxed to Germany, |! but that ts quite aside from this discussion, She has almost twice Overcoats A fine assortment of new overcoat- ings. Medium and Heavy-weight. Suits and Overcoats $50 to $85 KANE the TAILOR 1315 Third Ave. scares You Characterises our methods every transaction, and our cui tomers are accorded every cour. tesy consistent with so ness judgment. 4% Paid on Savings Accounts Accounts Subject to Check Are Cordially Invited SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST. Peoples Savings AN INVI Oct. 14th—the “Open House” to them. many cotnpliments received. GR To those who falled to visit our store on Saturday evening, Homes Week—we particulerly extend an tnvitation to come tn at any time, feeling that the privilege of the store is extended Saturday evening several thousand people accepted our cor @ial Invitation and visited this handsome big Furniture Store Thousands freely expressed thetr amazement et the exter siveness of this great institution and heartily congratulated us. Naturally we are very pleased and sincerely appreciative of the UNBAUM-BR FURNITURE Co. INC. SIXTH AVE. Sclween PIKE ond PINE Grunbaum Building TATION evening in honor of Better 0S Dr. Daniel G. Carey, of Elmira, N.Y., Eminent Kidney Specialist, Retires Leaves His Famous Prescription, No. 777, Known for Years A brilliant physician, @ diligent udent and, above all, @ man of great Intellect, he made the study of these diseases his life's work. During his forty years of con- stant practices Dr. Daniel G. Carey devoted almost his entire life to the study of this most important branch of medicine and his success, as 1s well known, was almost phenomenal. If Dr. Carey never 4i4 anything eine in his long, praiseworthy career but originate his famous Presorip- tion No. 777, his fame would live long after his useful Ife had ended Watch the symptoms was Dr. Carey's advice. The tiniest signals often indicate that the kidneys ere ailing and need attention Dry skin, for instance, and little specks cating before the eyes, Sometimes jslde. Then again that frequent | desire to empty the bladder, cold, clammy feet and just a little puffi- ness under the eyes. Occasionally the hands or feet swell slightly and the palms of the hands aro moist. Don’t neglect them—you cannot af- ford to take any chances with your kidneys, If you ever have the faintest sue- picton that your kidneys are we or your bladder 1a irritated the wisest thing you can do ts to get a bottle of Dr, Carey's Prescription No. 777 at once. Many thousands of cases could have been helped by Mamhroot if taken in time. Hereafter you can always get this effective prescription at reliable pharmacists the country over. Keep in mind the name, Dr. Carey's Pre. the feet feel heavy as if your shoes ere full of iead. Often the joints che or you have quick, darting scription No, 777. No other medi cine can take its place, Sold by All Drugguste, |ter of Ling, or _| During the war he was a part of the Deficits are met with a dally out) put of the printing presses, which erind out millions and millions of governments of Vienna are tn the) ‘hands of the soclaldemocrats, They have imposed. many unwise meas: | ures, As an instance, the prohibition | against any increase in rents has im- periled property rights, The income} from apartment houses t# not enough to pay for broken window | glasa, An Amertean we know ts Itving tn a handsome 10-roem apartment front ing of the Vienna parks. On Riverside drive it would bring $10, 000 or more & year in rentals, The occupant pays in American money ® yoar, 1 foar that too many of the atu dents of the Austrian question approached it from the local view point of Vienna alone, Certainly we |saw none of them efther in the agri |cultural districts, the industrial cen. in the lumbering regions, Many Americans aro visit ing Salzbu but the opera ts the at. et there. ALONE IS * PARADISE” We motored a day and « half and saw but few automobiles, In Vienna, the hours of labor have been short ened, wages have advanced with the Jecline of the kronen and industry continued on the down grade. first meal in Austria was at It ts located in the Tyrol on the extreme western frontier. The food supply was short, but fortunately fishermen had brought In from the lake that day a good-sized catch, The cost of the meal for four persons was two hun jdred thousand kronen. Before tho }war that would have been approx mately $40,000. The krone was then lfitty thousand to the dollar, It t now approximately one hundred | thousand, | There was no evidence of under. nourished chil@ren tn the agricul {tural regions, nor in the mountains. The crop yield was fairly good; the fertility of the soll has suffered sor because of the high cost of chemical jor bone fertilizer, Men, women end |children were laboring in the fields. | Wheat had been cut and threshing was going on, Every grain counta, not onty tn | Austria, but in other countries a» well, This was shown by the fact that children were picking up heads lof whent thet hud fellen off the stalk iduring the harv We saw this in Ravaria, ria and Czechoslovakia. |__,We entered Vienna at night time The ‘place was poorly lighted and cheerless, There is a shortage ef coal, and, unlike Switzerland, Aus tria has done practically nothing with her water power resources, the that the Maps has Our | Brogena. | region living im old Gervia and tn other suc- jceaston states. They are devoted to | muste. | HUNGRY CITY Is | HEARTENED BY MUSIC During the most stressful times, jthe authorities found {t easter to provide mualo than food. The masses attended the opera and went back to |their homes with a reinforced |morale, Was ever more sublime | tribute paid to the art? This picture of conditions ts drawn fn order that we may not minimize the difficulties that attend the of rehabilitating Austria, I belleve she can live. A hopeful, if not a confident, spirit is exprenned by Col. Chas. Causey, an American of successful mining, engineering and railroad experience general relief organization, Later he was assigned to supervise affairs in Austria and the three succession states until the governments were organized. He has been retained as jan industrial and transportation ad viser by the Austrian ministry. His judgment therefore amounts to something. Let us go to the basis of our belief |that Austria, ff given a chance equal to that of other struggling nations, can survive: Her creditors have granted an ex- tenston on her national debt. I found |no one anywhere who believes that jany attempt will ever be made to col lect tt. This disposes of that part of jthe equation. The geographical sit- juation of the country creates the lbase of a great transit commerce. |The lines from western Europe to} southeastern Europe and Asia turally through A KIDNEY. TROUBLE The American men and women must guard constantly against Kid ney trouble, because wo eat often too much red meat and all our food ia rich. Our blood ts filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to fil- ter out; they weaken from overwork, become sluggish, the eliminative tis- sues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a gon eral decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumpa of lead; your back hurts or the urine fs cloudy, full of sediment, or you lare obliged to seek relief two or \three times during the night; if you! suffer with sick headache, or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or if you rheumatiam when the weather is bad, get from your phar- jmaciat about four ounces of Jad | Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glasn of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from \the acid of grapes and lemon juice, jcombined with lithfa, and has been usel for generations to flush and! latimulate clogged kidneyn; to neu-| ltratize the acids in the urine @o It} no longer is © source of irritation, | Minor, lea thus often ending bladder disorders Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure, makes a delightful effervescent | lithia water beverage and belongs in| every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time. * ¥ Advertisement THE What an Absolute Auction Sale Means: tria, intersecting at Vienna the com- mercial route from Czechoslovakia to the Adriatic, This meeting place of the eastern and western lines with those from the north and south gives Vienna much Importance, NATIONAL HARMONY SEEMS IMPOSSIBLE Wienna has been the banking enter of this part of the world It can safely be ansumed that differences will disturb the natural channels of trade formed thru cen turtes, If the skeptic bases his be- lief upon the theory that Czecho- jovakia, Hungary will not trade with how can he reconcile that with the accompanying contention that the Rohemiane and Hungarians and Serbians should have remained under Austrian rule? If commerciat accord is impossible, then how could there have been any national harmony? Austria does not provide @ self sustaining food supply, but sho t# not alone in this, She must buy some wheat elsewhere, but in this connection let us be reminded that in England and even in Germany, agricultural authorities and econo miste have been debating the ques tion for many years ae to whether it would not be better to raise less wheat and turn soll activities over to more profitable uses, In short, Wuropeah countries are not con- vinced now that they can raise) wheat as cheaply ae they oan buy ft. Attention has already been called to the extensive breeding of cattle In the mountain regions, One of the most important natural resources of Austria {9 her abundant magnesite. It is said to,be found in only two other places in Burope, Few quar. ters are richer in the depos! ot coment. In specialized indust ) no clty in Europe has been more con- splouous than Vienna, Her coal sup- ply fs short, but It 1s admitted that every wheel in Austria can be turn- ef by hydroelectric power generated in that country. In discussing thts with Col, Causey, he stated that the hy@ro-electrical development would necessitate the purchase by Austria of only one essential—ecopper. When there was some prospect of the stabilization of the fiscal system, weveral foreign corporations were en- gnged in surveys based upon the op- portunities for agricultural, mining, hydro-electrical and banking develop: ment. Governmental order must pre- | poundary lines nor lngering racial SEATTLE STAR Of a portion of their holdings in the vicinity of Kinnear Park and Queen Anne Hill, in Greene’s Addition over- looking Lake Union; also choice lots on Western and First Avenues, suitable for business purposes. At Your Own Price—On Easy Terms When we use the word “absolute” we do so because we mean ft. Our contract with the George Kin- yee that every lot offered will positively be sold to the highest bidder if only one it furthermore provides that the George Kinnear Company will not directly or indi- rectly bid on any lot offered. Could you have anything fairer than to name the price yourself? If yours is the highest bid the owners must accept. Think what it means on the eve of a revival in Seattle real estate to be able to buy choice lots at your own price and on exceptionally easy terms. Seattle real estate 1s reviving. Soon the market will be as active as in Portland, San Francisco and Los Angeles, where more money has been made in real estate during the past two years than in several near Company bid is years To make money, buy low and sell high. You can buy the Geo Kinnear Com; own price and resell at a profit when the market gets active, rs ey oe ee THE SALE Witt BE HELD IN FINE ARTS HALL The George Kinnear Company HAS AUTHORIZED AN————— Absolute AUCTION SALE made, an preceding. Barry & Austin Tel. Elliott $932 415 Alaska Bldg. October 31st, at 1 p. m. 4 6 That's what an absolute auction sale means, a Ps . 1213 Fourth Avenue OUT AND MAIL Barry & Austin, 415 Alaska Bldg. Send me free booklet of the George Kinnear Com- pany’s Absolute Auction Sale. ¢ NOM6 oo. ownceweces caren ne ORne ones -945Dam Address Per eee cede everything else. Bome months of the most | attuation, | board, loa, Inc.) The new great won permission my BAKER, Indiana. Mrs. medicine.’ from feel all run and Minister Bones, and Jugoslavia | leader, are discussed by ex-Gov, Cox Vienna then |in his next article. SURE HELP TH as to all medi tion or energy for take Lydia E. Pin! age when en Austrian loan was un- der consideration, the three political parties agreed to form @ coalition gov- ernment and meet the conditions which would be imposed by foreign bankers, This was regarded as one hopeful symptoms of the If Germany in saved from collapse, Austria will not go by the (Copyright, 1932, by N, EB, A. Serw eee country, Czechoslovakia, its coming SICK WOMEN sick women. Itisa icine, and I give you touse my testimonial and "—Mrs, EMMA These letters recommending Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ought to convince women of the great worth of this medicine in tne treat- ment of ailments to which they are often subject. Baker calls it ‘‘a wonderful If you are suffering women often have, or down, without any ambi- regular work, "s Vegetable ive d. It is a natural restorati and should help YOU. —Advertisemont —at the Store of Credit Gladly —————— Extreme good taste is tailored into the rich Wraps we are now displaying for your approval—one of the models is illustrated. A wide selection is offered in such’fine materials as Ara- bella, Lustosa, ‘Marvella, Tarquena, Gorona and Panvalaine. The trim- Vy mings are in all the beautiful furs best suited to the various materials. The New Dresses Exceptional Values Late arrivals bring a myriad of fascinating dress styles — high-type, well- made models, in Poiret Twills, Satin-striped Duve- tyns, Georgette Crepes, Silks and Velvets— in all the handsome shades, at the surprise price of $33.50 z For a Limited Time Hundreds of Stylish Coats —in all the new and serviceable materials, nicely tailored. In all sizes, at THESE POPULAR PRICES: $39.50 or we are extending Special Credit ‘Terms—pay just one-sixth of your purchase and open an account at the Eastern— With Six Months to Pay 1s displaying the latest in stylish * millinery—a In Fine f a morn hen Furs stunning hi Handsome Coat: the new shapes and *Reckpieoes in the Now ahades— ana Shades of Foxes, $10.50 Btone. Marten, $12.50 Two En : wented. ture $15.00 209 Union Street 1832-34 Second Ave, ii Ynviled?Sariy:

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