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THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1919. TaN WARNS Will T. R. Jr. Fill Dad’s 3 er COUNCIL) Shoes? His Hat Is in Ring’ Tot Accused Others Who Followed in Footsteps 0 ful Act JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, sixth president, was the Be Unlawfu John Adams, second president, would ieee JAMIN HARRISON, twenty-third president, i My grandson of William Henry Harrison, ninth presi- dent. ; ROB 2 eT T. LINCOLN, secretary of war in the cab- inets of Garfield and Arthur, was the son of Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth president. JAMES R. GARFIELD, secretary of the interior in the cabinet of Theodore Roosevelt, was the son of James A. Garfield, twentieth president. t by the Ce oer ‘on charges of ¢ ™ by 4 contro! is ¢ Prosecutor Rrown. Mer act to try to ch leggovernment, but if it ts by the ballot done it must be wat by olen’, the letter on the floor of the feseneil declared the men Are majesty bert on political and that they imo the council Is at I them until they = DEAD prominent | iberty to —_—— POERS! 1, 84 fan of Ballard for the past Wednesday afternoon | pene, 17164 Dexter ave.. of Funeral services will be sy wpaer the auspices of the Elka* ‘of Ballard. of which organtza ‘eas a pioneer member, N HAD TO pROPPED UP ON RLOWS AT TIMES iy Spells and Could come Breath—Ten Years’ Suffering Overcome Mlustrating Twin Beds in Simmons’ new Colonial Design (No. 1962). Made of Simmans’ Seamless Square Tubing throughout. Has the Simmons patented new pressed Steel Noiseress Connen-Locns, Easy-running casters, Your choice of the Decorative Colors of the day. Modern Designs in Metal Beds shown by Merchants of this City AVE you seen these beautiful metal beds? If not, we suggest that you ask one of the prominent merchants to show, them to you. pa Re They are the modern designs just brought out by Simmons Company—and they are meeting with warm approval by the women of the city. The housewife of today knows Simmons Beds and Springs so well that it is hardly neces- sary to call attention to their quality. The name “Simmons”’ is a household word, and has been for a quarter of a century—the Nation-wide symbol of beds built for sleep. It was the Simmons Company who first studied beds in relation to sleep. Who first produced firm, sound construction in metal beds. Who invented, perfected and patented the pressed-steel corner locks, which make Simmons Beds four-square, sturdy and noiseless—inviting complete re- TEDDY, JUNIOR TEDDY, SENIOR How young Theodore Roosevelt would look if he had his famous father's mustache and eyeglasses, (Special to The Star by N. E. Ad) N YORK, May = 1.—Wi11) Verslty man, @ republican, and mar Theodore Roosevelt, junior, fall heir | Tied, with three children. At 31 his to the political crown worn by his | father had already several years of father? | public life to his credit, having been Will he be Teddy the Second, to | elected to the New York legislature the host of Roosevelt admirers the | “t 24, and being at 31 United States country over? teivil services commissioner tee apd completely failed until I) wil he follow the footsteps of his| T. Fi. the first, went od py said Mrs. R. E. Rit: iustrious father into the White | Spanish war a leutenant who is a well known and | House? jand came out a colonel; T. resident of E. 321) ‘Those are questions puzzling poli. | **cond. went to France a ma. ‘ge, Spokane, while in Mur-/ticians who look ahead, which in-| came back @ Lieutenant colo: recently. | terest a daily increasing stream of | Were educated at Harvard and both express the ¢erri:| Americans. | marrted into well-to-do families, T've gone through for) Many astute political leaders be- “I shall conduct myself as I be » continued Mrs. Rid-|leve the young man will some day|Ueve my father would have me,” I was all broken up in|be president. Indeed, they are| Colonel Roosevelt, jr., sald, } af bad no appetite at all/ grooming him for the job. Others! “I am not so immodest as to dream | ely allowed to cat the/are trying to climb on the band/! can fill his big niche. But thie ts of food and even this would wagon. & period in which every young Amer ‘and the gas from 4 i an should find out what his spe ig Ramee and the ee ee | LYMAN ABBOTT SEES duty Is, and perform tt." pains fm my right side and a * . Sey aomacd, until I could) Lo) De nyman Abbott “T wont move around. At times the |My Oi follow in the footsteps * 4 ’ ° 4 wees oa my heart and) of his father. No man can follow Be Kind to Animals off my breath, and My i, another's footateps. He must; Be kind to animals—this was Thad to be prop | iake his own mark. If this boy in|the message delivered to the stu- lanything like his father, he will|dentm and faculty of Queen Anne | strike out along original lines.” high school Wednesday by Hon, me. ye 4 ‘And Lieut. Col. Roosevelt is ike|Francis HH. Rowley of Boston, me to bel nis father. His head t# shaped like |Mass., who ts national president of Yeast bit Of/ that of his father, only broader at|the American Humane society, and and at night | tne top al the ears. In his con-|is spending several days in Seattle leep WAS) vorsation he is quick and decisive. |as the guest of the King County hen I'd) te has the typical Roosevelt grin, | Humane society. with the old T. R. flashing of teeth.|. Dr. Rowley outlined to the He has the same hearty handgrip. | Queen Anne students and faculty ‘The son hag the broad shoulders, the need for wider humanity and the powerful frame, the quick mo |brotherly love among the peoples | tons of, the father. His forehead,/of the world. Expecially did Dr | chin and nose are most like the elder) Rowley emphasize the philosophy of \r. R's. With thé addition of glasses | kindness to dumb animals. He told Selene} Roosevels. da: 81,:.0: unk that yield to every contour of the body, and still never lose their elasticity. @ tried for ten years to get @ ate relieve me of my suf OW, in these new Beds, this Company is bringing metal bed design into true relation with the accepted good taste in bedroom decoration. The time has passed when the woman of taste wished or even consented to “have every- thing match.” os Harmony, always—but repetition, no/ These new Simmons Beds har- monize beautifully with the simple, dainty bedrooms of today. Women find them charming— and very well worth while. Your choice of Double Width and Twin-Pairs — and especially pleasing in Twin-Pairs. Enameled in White and the Students Told to The new Hotel Pennsylvania in | the mew Hote | the great met fit their bedrooms and a wiry grey mustache, the re semblance would be more striking. |.| His square chin and strong neck are the story of a dog in Edinburgh, whose master had died, and so de-| |¥oted waa the dog to his master laxation of the nerves and deep, accepted Decorative Colors. Cost little if any more than ordi- refreshing sleep. It was the Simmons Company, too, who took hold of the spring problem—finally producing Springs SIMMONS COMPANY Kenosha, Wisconsin Bed: the hotels wwhich pride themulves on the comfort of their bedrooms. It will interest. you to bnew that this same exceptional sleeping eguipmentcanbe had for your home. peculiarly Rooseveltian. Also he's a hard worker; likes the outdoors and likes books. He has tossed his hat into the ring, meaning the ring of politics jand public life. At this moment Theodore, junior, is the most talked of young man In America. EXPECTED TO REFUSE VICE PRESIDENCY He has been asked to become a candidate for vice president next lyear. This, it is believed, he will re fuse. And still, his friends point to the fact that his father went from | that office to the presidency. At present Colonel Roowevelt is at his desk in the brokerage concern of Montgomery & Co., 14 Wall st., and is giving most of his spare hours -| to the organization of the American -| Legion, American veterans of the world war, the national convention 4% that he stayed in the vicinity of the grave for 11 months, only going across the street once a day to get a meal. \Noted Singer Wins | Praise of Audience! Mabel Garrison, Metropolitan | Jopera house soprano, captivated | her audience at the ‘Metropotitan | San Francisco, Cal. Newark, theatre Wednesday night, | Montreal, Canada with a [program consisting of popular [numbers, old-fashioned ballads and classical selections. The singer's voice and personality won the audience at once. George Siemonn, her husband, | was accompanist. The concert was | presented by J. W. Sayre. Union Will Enter the Meat Business The Meat Cutters’ union an- nounced Wednesday that the slaughter house to be operated by labor men will be opened in a few weeks. By co-operative buying, they hope to reduce the present high price of meat. This is a part of the union's fight on Frye & Co. City Will Improve nary beds. The Colonial pattern illustrated above is No. 1962. Seattle Wash. | SIMMONS BEDS Built for Sleep : bond dealers, and with his bride, a Georgia girl, whom he met while stationed at Atlanta, will make his home here. the lines Lieut. Colver became rest- targets by means of films, was used less and appealed to the medical re- for this purpose, [search board for active duty, He “Issoudun should never be men- | was assigned to make altitude and tioned without recalling Capt. Rob- Showed Birdmen How, But Saving Now! All funds left with this Mutual Savings Association on or before Monday, May 5th Fe Will be paid full two months’ dividends on July 1st You can start with One Dollar. Résourees More Than Three Million Dollars. Paget Sound Savings and | Loan Association Founded 1901. Where Pike Street Crosses Third. Hours: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Fort Lawton Roads Councilman William H. Moore, chairman of the streets and sewers committees, decided Wednesday night, following an investigation of condi- tions on the Fort Lawton roads, that improvement of both the Gilman ave., Government way and Magnolia boulevard routes is absolutely neces- sary. Work will begin before the end of the year, unless too many of the property owners file objections. The | action of the committee com result of a complaint by Ma. ’ Halloran, commandant of the army post. Figured at bootleg prices, A. B. Howell, 24, and Ernest Duplus, 26, are out exactly $720 worth of snake juice, The pair were apprehended in an automobile at Boren ave, and Roy at. Wednesday night. The liquor was contained in two five-gallon kegs. Both are held in the city jail on open charges. | Women Doing War Work | During the war women were called into almost every vocation in lite and right well did they assume ti responsibilities and fill such po: tions, In many instances, however, their strength has been overtaxed, and such ailments as are peculiar to thelr sex have fast themselves upon them. Such women should re member there is a tried and true remedy for their troubles in Lydia B Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which for more than three genera- tions has been relieving the women of Ameriag from some of the worst forms of female ills, as a}! Never Got Near to Front To be instructor of embryo combat flyers and aces in the biggest avia- tion center in the world is a small achievement in the opinion of Lieut. Henry Colver, who after spending several months overseas in this branch of the service, is back in Se attle, sorry he did not get into the front line fighting. 7 Lieut. Colver, who #has been in business in Seattle for several years, lied for admission into t army, the navy, and the marines succes- sively when war was declared, only to be disqualified each tfme on ac: count of a slight eye defect. Finally Entered Service “It began to look hopeless for go- ing across, but finally I got the charts down pretty well and man- aged to get by in the engineering section of the air service,” After training at several Southern flying fields Colver received a com- mission as second lieutenant and was | sent to Wright fleld, Ohio. In June, 1918, with 150 officers and enlisted | men, representing the American pio- neers in aviation armament work, he was sent overseas to Ivsoudun, the third aviation instruction center in France and the largest in the world, where 14 flying fields operated day and night. Instructed Cadets member of the 10th alr yer was detailed to in: “As a squadron struct cad to install guns on chasse planes, “A pilot in a chasse plane aims with the machine itself, instead of the gun, and as the gun shoots 700 times a minute, it t# necessary to he says. | in aerial gunnery and | synchronize the gears so the bullets will not conflict with propeller revo- lutions and injure the blades,” he ex- plained, Among the students in Lieut. Col- ver's gunnery classes were Lieut. Carl Spatz, now commander of the | Victory Flying circus, and Lieut. Ted Andrews, the Seattle flyer. | Asked Active Service | While engaged in this work behind | 'SHE DARKENED HER | GRAY HAIR | Well-Known Lady Tells How She Darkened Her Gray Hair by a Simple Home-Made Remedy Mra, FH. H. Boots, a well-known resident of Buchanan county, Iowa, | who darkened her gray hair by a simple home-made remedy, made the following statement: | | “Any lady or gentleman can dark.’ jen thelr gray or faded hair, and make it soft and glossy with this simple remedy, which they can mix at home: ‘To half a pint of water add bay rum, one small box ‘ompound and % ounce of glycerine, ‘These ingredients can be | purchased at any drug store at very [little cost. Apply to the hair every other day until the gray hair is dark ently, ‘This is not a iy, and It will make a look 10 to 20 gray-haired person years younger." | oxygen tests on daily flights with an air pilot fun put out by |manufacturer, which recorded the - ert Austin, an Am flyer, from | Danbury, Conn." red Lieut.| If you value Colver, “Capt. Austin was the best | Haynes repair it. combat flyer in the American army, | *tre-—Advertiseme: jand, in my opinion, the most valu- able man in the entire service, They never let him go up to the front, for |he was too valuable as an instruc: tor, While at Issoudun he trained over 670 flyers in combat work.” Lieut. Colver made persistent ef- | forts to get into action at the front, | jand was just making arrangements | | to become a night navigator of the ‘ new independent American bombing || Kryptok, Punktal, Crookes or any |forces when the armistice was signed, || other kind of lens fitted perfectly by Since his return Lieut. Colver has || OPtmetriet of larke experience. |gone to work for John FE. Price & ott aston that A moving picture camera your watch, In mind if your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding you have Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Dis- ease, which is a menace to good health. We are the only Dentists in the Northwest who specialize in this dread disease, Examina- tion and estimate free. Special care taken of children's teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families, We can’t let the job our boys have done in France go unfinished. We've got to see it through. We've got to raise the money to make sure of the victory they’ve won, and to bring back} the rest of our soldiers, \ Let’s support the Victory Loan ff as we did the Liberty Loans! First National Bank All work guaranteed 15 years, United Painless Dentists INC. 608 Third Ave. Cor. James St. Phone Eliott 3633, Hours: 8:30 a, m, to 6 p,m. Sundays, 9 to 12. let Near Liberty the-