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! }|Hobgoblins Will Haunt N. P. Diners Halloween Eve--It’s a Titus Stunt] _ Here's Way Hobgoblin Special Will Look on N. P. Tuesday Night | sconer » “Haunted” Halloween trains— blin specials! A brand new stunt devised Hazen J. Titus, genial, resource- head of the Northern Pacific car service | On Oct. 31 every one of the 62 operated between Seattle St. Paul will be tenanted by real, live Senegambian bearers. car conductors and wait-| will he attired in yama-yama | the coaches _will be festooned | spook lanterns and the tables ted with the weird appurte | J of witchery. Even the eyes of the famous} "’ it big baked potatoes” may be} pec’ Oo behave with uncanny | i , Says Titus | The dusky waiters have been| d to approach the grinning, pumpkin head lanterns on tables without blanching faces quaking knees. But they have a to work with fingers crossed the goblin cars. “We're going to give passengers AMUSEMENTS Namee® 3 &PINET RPHEUM VAUDEVILLE # wice Dully—All This Week | HIE TUCKER | berries,” a homely love story, sketch. MATINEE DAILY 10-25-59 VENINGS 10- 25-50-75: \A/ILKES PLAYERS Croup ne aw i Tonight, :20—All Week i “Trail of the Lonesome Pine” || Im the Virginia “Hine Ridge” 25¢ Matinees Thurs, Sat, Sun. |! Nigh’ ¢ to Se. | W PANTAGES Mats, 2:30—Nights, 7 and 9 O'NEAL AND WAMSLEY In “The Two Pikers” RAUL PEREIRA STRING SEXTETTE ig Features 10¢ and 20¢ PALACE HIP Shows Continues, 1:20 to 11 { FLORENCE 1 4 | and Other Va Eameow | S-part Goi : | “THE sit BO. | ith GLADYS Ht Mats, 9c any seat; Eve, and Sun, i5¢ a | | MN the Hal n thrills they've! n accustomed to at home plained Titus, “and some t It's a new stunt-—never a done by any other railway—and I} know it will ring the bell And, you know & romantic bachelor's roguishness, “there are plenty of mirrors in our diners. Who knows but that some beautiful young lady or handsome devil of a man will see the face of future life mate peering across 4 reflected shoulder, according to the old Halloween tradition! Titus himself—a 100-per-cent bachelor—will be riding on one of the hobgoblin specials, girls, And| he's known to be speculating sort ously about marriage if he can find the right maid! ] You're right, Titus Who knows?" * he added with} | ONE IN FIVE VOTERS | ARE NATURALIZED, | Approximately 20 per cen attle’s voters are naturali zens, according to Chief R. a tion Clerk Gaines } DR. JORDAN WINS Dr. J. E. Jordan, whom the real Medical board attempted to bt from practice on account of tising, won his fight for a reb ing in the supreme court, it was announced Monay i $25 for $10 SPECIAL THIS WEEK ONLY To introduce our wonderful and genuine Trubyte teeth, which are More true to nstural teeth than anything yet rawduced, we will make you, this ek only, a regular 00 set of these wonderful teeth for $10.00. If you are in n a set of plates, do not fail to take ad vantage of this offer. Have your teeth extracted post tively painlessly free by our latest method Protective guarantee with all | work National Painless Dentists N. W. Cor. Faurth and Pike Open Sunday: 130 to 1 p. m. t TONI THE BIG GHT ANNUAL HALLOWE'EN —AT THE— HIPPODROME Silver Mesh Bags—Wrist and Gold Pocket Watches— Opera Glasses—Gold Cigarette Cases — Sterling Silver Shaving Sets and Standard Vanity Sets. Also Many Other Wondrously Beautiful and Expensive Prizes! TOTAL VALUE $300 1 wy | THEATRES | GRAND The Larson Duo made the big} hit of the bill at the Grand theatre Sunday, with violin and singing numbers, They were made to spond to several encoren Richards and Milan introduced their “original jokes and paro dies Prichard ws the rich otch brogue of the highlands of Scotland, which he uses to tell dia lect stories and it ome good nongs Van Horn ar Ammoran are dancers with a keen sense of hu mor, Their work erformed for the most pa Thomas « from the latest patter, and present it ence in a pleasing m Three pletures co! to bill, They are Mountain Tragedy Queller ALHAMBRA Sophie Tucker may high with the er but she certain! time fiends sit up shoulders, Hence when she sang at (h the new Orpheum v Sunday Bert Fitagibbon is here, to does a daffy act and has a prett &irl sing from one of the t It's a stunt that never seems t grow old A deaf man could y the show too, because he could look at Ruth] Budd and feel satisfied with | price of admission Other acta are, “Cranberries,” a sketch; Johnny Cantwell and Reta Walker, and Earl Bacon and Claudo Anderson ORPHEUM The Wilk pia cellent offering this Trail of the Lonesome Pin There is the smell of t nesome Southern ne y is charming picturesque Hunt t* delightful and is June, Geor staged production | PALACE HIP The Amer acrobats drome Ro: 10, which opened ye at the Palace Hip. This c ny of akilled ath letes do th stunts of Jump ing, somersau ng and twisting ta! midair, Hazel He Mack good « r Rodgers and Brockway, in “Work ing for , at over good comedy, The Curtia Trio succeed in their an nounced intention of “making dull moments bright.” Johnson and Arthur are comedy magicians The feature photoplay is the 13th chapter of “The Grip of Evil” ser-| 1. For Monday, Tuesday day, in @ to show, there Will also be presen: Shine Girl.” with Gladys Hu n the star part ee OAK This week's offering at the Oak theatre, “A Night on a Roof Gar-| den,” which is bid as “the show of the thousand laughs,” it is an} entirely new line of ¢ y for Monte Carter, Louw Da i ne Weiss, Ira Robertson and Blanche} Gilmore, and gives Walter Spen-| cer and pretty Phyllis Gordon op portunity to do some very effective work with the Dancing Chicks in| spectaltl as well as in their) straight roles | LABOR FOR WILSON SAYS BOB HESKETH In a letter to the Literary Digest,| in answer to an inquiry concerning} the trend of labor in th ming | election, Counci an Rober Hes keth, one of the organizers of the American eration of Labor, ywing statement | nblican, I was a | convention at Ch have asked me a direct qu opinion the lab QUIT MEAT WHEN KIDNEYS BOTHER Take a glass of Salts before break. fast If your Back hurts or Blad- der is troubling you No man or woman who eats meat larly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occastonally, says a we}l-known authority. Meat! forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and polsons from the blood, then we get sick Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver troubl 4, dizal ness, sleeplessness a inary dis-| from sly h kidneys. nt you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your « hurts or if the ia cloudy, offensive, nt, irregular of pas-| sage or attended by sation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad § fast and in a few days your kidneys | will act fine, This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lith and has been used for generatic to flush and stimulate the kidne also to neutralize the acids In urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive and can. not injure; ma a delightful ef. fervescent lithia-water drink which | every one should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood 4 thereby avoiding serious kidney complica tions, STAR—MONDAY, OCT. 30, 1916 PAGE 6 (PAID ADVERTISING) MAMMOTH PLANT SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO., SEATTLE—THIRD LARGEST IN AMERICA. IS IT FAIR To Washington? \ HE above isa picture of one of thelargest, most completely modern brewing plants in the United States. Prior to the enactment of the present so- called “dry” law, this mammoth institution was making upwards of 500,000 barrels of beer per annum, on which it paid the internal revenue department of the United States government approximately $750,000 in revenue taxes, This enormous output was consumed largely be- yond the borders of Washington, the bulk of it being shipped to foreign countries and points outside the state. The millions of dollars in gold coin that this great industry once brought to Washington found its way through the banks of Seattle to the farmers for grain and hops; to the many hundreds of well-paid, skilled labor- ers employed in and about this magnificent plant; to wholesale and retail houses and manufacturers for sup- plies; for heavy taxes; for city water and light; for Washington-mined coal—and the recipients in turn dis- tributed these vast sums into every nook and ‘corner of the state. All this is changed now! This great plant—the pride of Seattle—and similar prosperous brewing institutions of Tacoma, Aberdeen, Olympia, Everett, North Yakima, Spokane, Ellensburg, Port Townsend, Port Angeles and other cities, all con- tributors to the stream of gold that once flowed con- stantly through our state, are closed. San Francisco, St. Louis, Milwaukee and other cities are now reaping the golden harvest. The farmer, the wage earner, the banker, the man- ufacturer of Washington no longer share in the millions of dollars in wealth formerly actually created within its borders, mostly from raw materials grown in the state. On the contrary, not only have they lost this source of vast revenue, but now themselves arc burdened with additional taxes to meet the deficiencies arising out of the closing of such big institutions. And the state of Washington is NOT dry. Hard liquor, mostly in the form of poisonous, doped whiskey, dangerous in the extreme, is gradually taking the place of mild, harmless beer. The “bootlegger” is everywhere, with his “hip- pocket” flask of deadly quality. Young boys and young girls, who before the “dry” law went into effect were “immune” from temptation, are the innocent victims of the walking “blind-pigger,” who plies his trade in cafes and dance halls, at Sunday picnics and in the public parks. Consumers of pure, wholesome beer, so low in alcoholic content that it is in reality a temperance drink, denied their favorite beverage, are taking to the easily- obtainable “dope” whiskey. Beer, as it is well known, cannot be adulterated, and its very bulk alone prohibits its concealment about the person. Beer is essentially a home drink, and its private use at home should and ought to be permitted. It is a widely observed fact that where beer is kept openly in the home, people show no desire or inclina- tion to abuse the privilege. If alcoholic beverages are to be permitted in the home, which shall it be—dangerous, impure, ardent spirits, or a pure, unadulterated 4 per cent beer? Beer used in Washington should be made in Wash- ington. Can there be any objection to giving: the manu- facturing industries of our own state of Washington the thousands of dollars now being sent to the brewers of St. Louis, Milwaukee, San Francisco and British Colum- bia? We think not. Are you satisfied with the confiscation of the splen- did properties, such as the one pictured above, while the same alien Anti-Saloon League forces that closed them are working with all their might to pass a law in California that permits not only the manufacture of beer, but also wines and whiskies for shipment into “dry” (2) Washington. Are you aware that the recently passed British Columbia measure, framed and enacted into law by this same zealous band of non-resident, non-taxpaying, Anti-Saloon League paid workers permits the manufac- ture of beer for home consumption and export into Washington? . Is it a fair and square deal? In a nutshell, if it is morally and legally right to drink beer in Washington, why is it not morally and legally right to manufacture beer in Washington?