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| 608 Third Ave. World’s BY JACK NEVILLE MMerican newspaperman and ins Vestigator who has lived for yea in Mexico and who ha four months there tail for The Star). (Copyright, 1919, Newspaper Enter- prise Association), just si on special de MEXICO CITY, July 21 Hermila Galindo faces the task of any woman in the wor When she has accomplished as muth as Jane Adams, Evangelin Booth, the Pankhursts, Margaret Sanger, Mme. Montesorri, Carrie Senorita hardest cneer Hermila Galindo Chapman Catt and a few others she Twill be only getting away to a fair Hermila Galindo, single-handed, is Attempting to emancipate Latin American women from superstition, ignerance, suppression and the iron- bound traditions of centuries. Her first battle is with the women Superior in flavor and quality! There’s a reason. 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 dreaded disease, Exami- nation afd estimate free, Special care taken of children’s, teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families. ‘hited Painless Dentists INC. Cor, James St. Phone Elliott 3633 Hours: 8:30 a, m. to 6 p.m. Sundays, 9 to 12, Toughest Job ! To any other would seem hopeless. began she had the moral backing of only two big men—President Car ranza and General Pablo Gonzalez. | ‘Today she is making headway She has organ’ the National Feminine council and is publish ing one of the two women’s maga in Mexico, ‘Through the circulation of this periodical she |is explaining the objectives of the council Through the council she expects to uplift the women. | The majority of Anglo-Saxon wo. .en are determined to hieve sex equality, But the Latin-American woman ts different. For centuries jshe has been taught her sphere of | activity is bounded by the doors of her home. No woman of respectability walks the streets a She is accompanied on shopping tours by servants or members of the family, She never attends a movie alone, nor can she stroll in the park without chaper ones, OLD TRADITIONS HAMPER WO) The young girl who goes alone with a man frieud is openly talked about. The girl even who goes shop ping alone sets tongues wagging. No woman can do office or store work | without her character being opened | to attack n ‘laws have favored the end only recently has the di- been added to the statutes. E that is a ten-to-one shot in man's favor. But that is not all Miss Galindo has to contend with. Four-fifths of the Latin-American women are 1! literate. They know neither hygiene nor sanitation, The other fifth of these women are refined, highly cul tured, exeremely feminine, sensitive and not over-energetic. Between these two classes yawns a gulf that must be bridged. Under the revolutionary program woman the task| When she | zines Typical young Mexican girl of the lower class bound by cen- turies of tradition, ignorance and supersition, whose emancipation the Feminine Council seeks. in Mexico, shackled woman has not been freed, but she has been given more leeway. This is the starter, and Hermila Galindo means to break the bonds and fully emanci. pate Latin-American womanhood, SETS EXAMPLE BY SEEKING OFFICE Certain Mexican men and women educated in the United States are aiding her. Some women of the American and English colonies are lending their assistance, Hermila Galindo, cultured and an artist of note, herself set the women an example two years ago by run- ning for public office. She did not expect election. Nor was she elect ed. But she inspired a certain con- fidence amongst her_ sex. The aims of the National Feminine council may be divided roughly into three sections—the education of the woman, their material uplift and their general interests. As @ starter the women are urged to become interested in Red Cross activities. Then the attack on the agesold problem—the regeneration of fallen women. Other work of the council pro- motes civic and national Interest and patriotism; education in motherhood and housekeeping; teathing of lb- eral arts, manual and office work, social work and reforms; the fight against tuberculoris and insanitation; establishment of maternity hospitals; protection of the health of children; equal rights for men and women in business and politics; woman police work, and the solidarity of women. ASKS AMERICAN WOMEN’S AID When I called on Miss Galindo at her home—Sexton Calle Ramirez | she asked me ‘if she could expect aid |from the women of the United States. I assured her I would invite American women to correspond with | and assist her. “When American and Mexica women better understand each other she told me, “the men will better real. ize how detrimental to the two re | publics is the present mutual aloof. | ness.” | ‘That afternoon I spent hours in jthe capital's slums. It led to one conclusion —-“‘Hermila Galindo has contracted the toughest job in the world.” | | | PPAR te A cA by MESS | SWISS MINISTER IS RAINIER CLUB GUEST Dr. Hans Sulzer, minister to the United States from Switzerland, was the guest of the foreign trade bureau of the Chamber of Commerce at a luncheon in the Rainier club Mon- day noon, He visited Tacoma Sun- day, and will leave for Yellowst6ne park Wednesday. He is an advocate of the league of nations, LUMBERMEN TO HEAR OF REFORESTATION Ways and means of reforestation | of logged-off lands in the state of Washington will be discussed at the Washington Hotel ‘Tuesday afternoon 2 o'clock by a group of represen Find No Trace of Daniel charged from th, appeared representative of the Aco Products| (0° tanawer company, | ‘ me +f ¥: > ft you Bnd the right answer to that question, you won't get one-half’ of the sheer enjoyment and comfort you should get from each day’s smoking. Maybe you have the answer already. Maybe your present cigarette is exactly the right one for you. If so, hang on to it— u’re lucky and this story is not meant lor you. _ But, unless you are positive—anless you KNOW-—that your present cigarette suits you better than any other cigarette pos- sibly can, it will pay you well to understand this question of “How much Turkish?” Straight Turkish vs.’ Domestic \Tobaccos’ Turkish and Domestic tobaccos are very different from each other. Turkish has a delicate, smooth flavor and a very rich, heavy aroma—Domestic has more real tobacco character, and the better grades possess what tobacco men like to call “life” or “sparkle.”, Some men (comparatively few, however) , can smoke straight Turkish cigarettes all day long. ” : Others—-many of them, our records jhow—go to the other extreme, and prefer , TE ORD yr BAI Be ree i THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, JULY 21, 1919. Ht No cigarette names mentioned, There are only three kinds of cigarettes: (1) those containing Turkish tobaccos alone, (2) those containing Domestic tobaccos alone, and (3) those containing various blends of both Turkish and Domestic. We manufacture all three kinds. Hence we have nothing to lose and everything to gain by advising you fairly and openly as to which one of these three kinds of cigarettes will probably suit you best. “How much Turkish?” is the big question in choos- } ing a cigarette and the more smokers we can help by this frank advice, the more steady, contented purchas’ ers we can count on, year after year, for our various cigarettes. Tear out this advertisement—show it to some friend. hace re MANUFACTURERS OF EVERY KIND OF CIGARETTES Sg Are you smoking too | ~ much—or too little—Turkish? straight Domestic. They can’t stand any Turkish at all. They find it over-rich or heavy—too much aroma. _. And in between these two extremes is the big majority—the normal or average smokers. / These average smokers like the Turkish’ flavor—yes. But they find that Turkish tobacco is something like plum pudding or candy—awfully good, but too much is, decidedlv, too much. | as = ‘Turkish and Domestic -—Blended /So the average smoker finds that the just-right cigarette is‘a happy medium— that he can smoke more often and ly get more solid pleasure out of his smok- ing, all day long, by choosing a cigarette which is of part Turkish and part Domestic tobaccos, combined in a good blend. Such cigarettes are called ‘‘ Turkish blend’” cigarettes, eS How to recognize a good “Turkish blend” "There are only two things that count in a “Turkish blend” cigarette. One is, ~SHh rr t, or | Copyright, 1919, By Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. he quality of the tobaccos themselves (both Turkish and Domestic), and the other is the proper proportioning of each to each in the blending. But while there are many “Turkish' blends” on the market, it is easy for any- one to pick the good ones. Here is a simple test. If a cigarette satisfies your own requirements on these three points, it is pretty sure to be both a good blend and the right smoke for you: First—It must give you that real Turkish flavor—but not so much of it as to be too rich or heavy. Second—Along with this Turkish flavor, watch also for that “life” and delightful “sparkle” or that ripe, cool mellow- ness, pecaliar to certain Domestic tobaccos, Third —The cigarette should let your' smoke appetite stay sharp and crisp so that you will relish every smoke clear up to bed-time; and whether or not you. happen to smoke more heavily than usual, it should leave you feeling keen and fine. . baud == “How much Turkish?” : So begin with this question —“How: much Turkish?” You'll have to answer it yourself, for each man’s taste is his own.’ But keep thinking about it; for when' you’ve answered it correctly, you'll have found ‘‘your’’ cigarette. And we know we don’t need to emphasize how much that will mean to you. Beginning next Week we shall resume the advertising here in Seattle for one of our lead- ing “Turkish blend” cigarets. These advertisements will tell you more about “How much Turkish?” and we feel quite certain they will ina terest you. ‘ PAGE 11 TRANSPORTATION CLUB Missing Veteran) HOLDS AUTO LUNCHEON| found no trace of| Celebrating “auto day,” the Trans-| 36, recently dis-| POfation club held its weekly lunch-| ‘army, who dis-| ©" Monday noon, Among the speak Friday after writing a| ote were R. M Dy r, president of the to his wife in Ta- BU tORneNe Club of Washington was the ‘Tacoma| John W. Roberts, vic the Automobile club; I and EB Ic Police have Miller, ‘arewell note oma. Miller a Bhiiey: Hoffman, | president ciation, W. J. Coyle, managing sec: | MAJOR KINGSBURY IS * BACK FROM OVERSEAS Maj. John A. Kingsbury, former principal of the Green Lake school, has returned to Seattle. He has been engaged in sociological research work in New York, and during the war was in France doing the same Chamber of Commerce, also spoke. PLEADS GUILTY AND PAYS FINE OF $100 Pleading guilty to a charge of having booze on board his vessel | when arriving from San Francisco and promising that it would never- more occur, Capt, Thomas Johnson, |of the Admiral Farragut, was fined | $100 in federal court | morning by Judge Jer Been ' STOPPE For Over 50 Years Dd! KLINE’: PI WeMEDY Wiss tations anf tema successful treatment for Fi lepey (Failing Sickness) and kindr: Peter Exgtvet, 68, 136 Melrose jave. N., died at his home Sunday} morning, He had been a resident of Washington for 43 years, He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Annie Egtvet, and four sons, Clifford of Anchorage, — Ashley ercy and Kirby of Seattle. uneral services will be held Wednesday at 2 o'clock ie Gfaves, head of the forest service ves of lumbermen and Col. Henry of the United States government, |from the Bonney-Watson chapel, land interment will be in Lakeview ecmetery, iF our je book Its C0, ncrreament® anoe Overturns; | Woman Is Drowned | VANCOUVER, + duly A | search is being m river for the body of Mrs, Lillian Swigert a travel resident of | Fy ep. building, ; | Details of the accident have not been of the Auto Dealers’ a880-| received, but it is believed that Mrs. | Swigert retary of the Washington Automobile | when it overturned in the river. Mrs | Swigert wom Pi Thieves stole the no|R. Secarelli, 652 | Railroad ave., near § of Loren W July 18. Sunda ulesman for the Geor Co. in the Downs who was drowned Sun wife machine on a |The thieves had 5 lived at A115 Eastlake A water piper Jhome of L. W. w., [renee of a burg |noon. ‘The kind |a gold watch, field glass Janda revolver stolen, stlake vepanean | 15 | ficial Kisses are the n exchange with each other. |Steal Auto; Take Ride; Burn Car Up automobile of kson st., , the Olympi. found what was left of the road near Olympia fire to the car. | BURGLAR CLIMBS PIPE outside Toomey, 5342 was the means of en- ar Saturday after-| house was ransacked, | es, clothing | | GIRL TAKES POISON | PLAIN OR BUT WILL RECOVER oNvnusT. | Leby Masloff, aged 2, daughter of | Max Masloff, 1303 Washington st., | swallowed a small quantity of potas. | sium permanganate Saturday night. She was taken to the city hospital. | She will recover. from 0 paddy RINGS AND WATCHES ALBERT HANSEN of the 50th mples and Skin Eruptions | Danger Signs of Bad Blood, A MEDICINE of merit. A tonic altéra-’ tive and diuretic. Prepared under |Avoid Suffering by Heeding These Warnings Pimples, scaly, itching skin, rashes and burning sensations de- note with unfailing ainty a de- bilitated, weakened and impure state of the blood, The trouble is in your blood and no matter how you were infected, you must treat it through the blood. It is a blood disease. You must use 8S. 8, 8, if you expect certain relief. c nsing the system, equal to it, The action of 8. 8. 8. For| your druggist, nothing ts | through the system direct to the seat of the trouble—acting as an antidote to neutralize the blood poi- sons. It revitallzes the red blood corpuscles, increases the flow, so that the blood can properly perform its physical work, The dull, sluggish feeling leaves you clears up. respond promptly. take 8, 8. 8, tutes won't do, But you must Drugs and substi- Get S. 8. S. from If yours ts a spe- and you need expert ad- vice, write to Medical Adviser, clal case is to cleanse the blood, Jt soaks! Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga, the complexion } aven long standing cases | formula filed with and approved by the Department of Chemistry of the Internal Revenue Office Washington, D. C. 4 \ BRIACEA DRUGCO,, Ransas City, Mo, Manufoatares: Wy Blumauer-Frank Drug Company) | Portland, Oregon « Sole Distributors For Oregon, Washington and Idaho, . ASK YOUR DRUGGIST