The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 22, 1919, Page 13

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THE SEATTLE STAR—-MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1919. —By CONDO|, ——~ DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Who EVER IS RUIGING TAT Dooe BELL 1S TRYING To Beear tT EVipewTLyY —~———) EVERETT TRUE WSir, WELL, SVERS TT, WHERE ‘You Boon ALK “THO TIMG ¢ Helen Gets a Surprise. MY BIG SISTER 1 Hered! ibe ie MY LTTE SISTER WeLt, Sis, Aned*r You GLAD Ste me? Why Dow'r You JUMP UP AND DowN AND WHAT ARE You GETTIN’ ALL ORESSED uP For ? YOU TOLD ME Turs MORNIN’ THAT. WE WERE GOIN’ OVER To MRS. SMITH'S HOUSE VONIGHT Lions of Liberty Let Out Huge Roar to Congress “The Lions of Liberty” are among a working under the guise of modern | reformers, endeavoring by question- | “The Lions” are a group of men | able methods of professional graft- Dwho have organized “for social, fra |¢rs to influence legislation in be- fernal, educational, patrictic and | half of the rights and privileges PP Benevolent purposes and the advance. | of citizenship. “ment of Americanism.” - | we believe in ~ Americanism | “The 1 " lenat protects the tndtvidual, insur- memorial to cone ger oray e ee a cease gee pen the pursult of happiness; prevents or the foo eae Shiny rear wild Invasion of the sanctity of the Ceitinens and the presence at the home; guarantees the authority to worship God, according to the dlc- | gapitol of notoriously paid) rite, of conscience, and permits, | ay without undue restrictions, the full| “We recognize with regret.” the and free enjoyment of every right, Memorial to congress reads, “that| privilege and benefit promised by | ‘the personal liberties of American tne Declaration of American Inde- “Citizens are alarmingly restricted | pendenc: @nd dangerously imperiled by class | ——E Commend Officers ts and intolerant advo | for Enforcing Laws) cates of untried theories, inviting | @ecial chaos, industrial restlessness ‘The Retail Druggists’ association | |- of the Retail Trade Bureau of the _ “We are emphatically opposed to Chamber of Commerce and Com- | mercial Club has adopted a resolution | “the presence of notorious paid | Tobbyists at the national capital, commending Prosecuting Attorney | Fred C. Brown) Frank T. Gordon, | GEE SIS = HD You BAKE SOME WES TODAY ? 5 GbE wt Thovsur 1 SMBLLED DIB & NCE Paci DBS NES—( MADE Soe, WOT WE ATE : Done FRRING WERE, IT SEEMS = WELL, To MAME- SURE WE'LL @H! BUT THIS IS AN OLO RELIABLE Fien! DO YOU KNOW WE ARE PIONEERS IN THE BUTTER AND EGG JYOU MEAN | PROFITEERS DONT you? YOUR PRICES DOZEN EGGS { @RE HIGHER HOW MOCH ARE THEY? 3 cuting attorney's office, and Nor man Wardall, auditor, “who have 4 GAINS 30 POUNDS unceasingly put forth during their | entire administration a conscientious | TAKING TANLAC and effeetive effort to strictly en-| law governing thes ale and use of | alcohol.” ? ST ; jonuae BF re tc ahdee Sees ee Sem niet || KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES— _ lcounty authorities on the sale and MRS. JONES BUYS since I commenced taking this Tan-| _ ALL HER BUTTER AN’ (ae Bayon gma ge yam LANCASTER MILLS OPEN ty-five years,” . A. Me- (CASTE! ‘ , © well known eimploye of the | ron and tect imiis"in thin ‘county || | {AND COMPANY? LET'S et £ 1043 "past Fifteenth eblacee Working as weal thi} TRY THEN t'DEAR! NY, en ee | ITS & VERY HI6H || | | TONE STORE! force the letter and spirit of the ‘I have gained thirty pounds | use of alcohol. EGGS aT SOAKEN ? Korth, Portland, while talking to FRESHER? | Taplac representative the other day. | _ “I can now understand why s0_ many people all over the United | Btates and Canada are publicly en-| _ @orsing Tanlac,” continued Mr. Mc- | Gil, “for I have tried tt myself! wand out of all the medicine and ‘treatments I have taken during the ypast twelve years, Tanlac is the)... only thing that has done me any | WILKES good at all. I suffered something | @wful from stomach and kidney | “If only his energies could be | verted in the right direction It has often been said. And often| troubles, and ever since these trou- Dies began my condition has grad- wally grown worse, Everything I wate soured on my stomach and I ‘would be bloated up with gas for hours at a time, and suffered ter- Fibly from shortness of breath. I had pains in the small of my back ‘mearty all the time, and when I ‘stooped over for anything I could hhardiy straighten up again. I sel- dom ever got a good nig! rest, g@nd felt just as tired and worn out every morning as I did when I swent to bed at night, In fact, I @ tired, draggy feeling all the and it just seemed that all energy had left me. I suffered constipation, too, ofte: faging headaches, and fina to where I would be complete- exhausted if I walked only a lew blocks. tell the truth, I was just ut disgusted with medicine, and hing else for that matter, I had read so much about Tan helping others that I decided my |the diverting has been attempted. | School teachers are sometimes muc- |censtul in diverting the energies of | | kids, but it is only once in an age! | that a wife makes @ real man out of the chump. | Nevertheless, Emily Regan does It. |Michael R. Regan is her bit of clay. She moldy him out of a po Utical ward heeler into a righteous |fightng man of might in the big | Emily is played by charming Jane |Morgan, leading woman of the| | Wilkes Players. Alexis Luce is| Regan. The play is called “The | Boss.” It is played in a manner that | reflects credit upon the entire com- pany Regan, “The Boss,” was a power in the Fourth ward, He knew poli-| |ties—iowdown politics—better than | jany other man in the metropolis, and | he played it vehemently to the al-| mont utter ruin of his business. Then Emily came, | ‘There were tenements to be clean led up. Emily desired it. There was OTTO AUTO WEA, TH Ot! ConSTABLE “Wiis HE'S GOT ME THAR BY SUCCOTASH - THAT SLICKER OTTO Kin ARGIFY (TOUT wT A L0G AS TO EF HELL STOP, gee what it would do for mMé¢.\/one man in the town w fell, sir, Taniac gave me the sur-/¢ienting caliber to do what ae of my life, for by the time I/ Regan. And, with gentle influence, 6 finished my first bottle of this | «he turned his thoughts from cruder dicine I was feeling like @ d!f-| things and spurred him on to make| pt man altogether. I stuck to\, good fight for a good cause, and! lac until I had taken seven bot- | won. F , and now you won't find a Mike Regan's battle is one that hier or stronger man 4NY~- | shakes the city. to ite very roots. You ‘ than I am. It is simply) get a good cilitch on the arma of bmderful the way I have gained|your chair and hold your breath— fine stage setting and the wholesome to a young army flyer, who has mar: | |overcomes mother’s objections to the match brew comedians, go to a fashior A Here they © attractive. Hughes, as grandmother resort for their nerves dialects. are looking for husbands with lots] Know Red ide on | nd Shi a French Cross nurse of money and not long to res earth, In White and Blask they |‘ think have found the right ‘This is the real funny act e}a lot of stories in many meet a couple of flashy widows, who|hit of the bill sy comedy singing, talk! dancing act different He proved the individual ee ‘HutEson-DONAHEY ‘tne tone) Optical @mpany nd | 325 PIKE ST, les and Hurst, ort of Vaudevii Wright and Earle have weight and strength. The truth the matter is Tanlac just knock- / my troubles winding, and I am $2 Ch fine condition now that I do as much work in a day as er could. I have a good appe- and eat just anything is before me, and as much nt, and I never suffer the afterwards, The pains in my are a thing of the past, are the laches, and when I hit_the bed at night I go to sleep am dead to the world until lime to get up in the morning. I don’t have to take medicine of any kind now, but if I ever do again, Mt will_certainily be Taniac. 1 am buyingBhis bottle for my wife, as ghe stems to be in a badly run- down condition, and 1 believe Tan- Ine will straighten her up all righ’ Taniac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di rection of a special Tanlac represen- : dvertisement, and| that's the kind of a show it is, eee MUSICAL SHOW AT MET “My Honolulu Girl,” alleged mu | sical show, opened at the Metropoll an Sunday night, to remain a week, | |There will be matinees Wednesday | and Saturday. | MOORE Music predominates at the Moore this we The entire bill is pleas. ing. The show opens with the Bell Sisters, in a neat, dancing act, Ma- leta Bonconi and her violin win jhearty applause in an excellent num: | ber. | Sibil Vane, who sing: |to the hearts of her he |act well worth while. She would be! a headliner in any show, but her| |planist makes the act a wonder. | Mias Vane can sing, and Her | pianist Paderewskis all over the ivories when she isn't on the stage. Stone and Kallz present a musical fantasy called, “Romance,” ‘The | her way In- has an} does, whom brin; on the bill. Harry Breen, with hfs foolish after an absence of more than a year, He's as good as ever, and gets a big laugh The “Honey Boys,” seven black face singers and comedians, one of back old days with an eccentric “softshoe” dar well received, ‘The choruses are the kind of music an audiences loves to hear and hears #0 seldom. The Orpheum Travelogue shows scenes from President Wilson's trip. eee LEVY'S ORPHEUM Lew White, comedian, who has been absent from the Midsummer Volly Musical Comedy company at Levy's for a month, made hia pearance Sunday afternoon in Jolly Widows" White received a big receptiag upon his first entrance, and hig @@medy work thruout the show werd @ver with a bang. White @iid Billy Blask, both He e, are e\ing great Hip, jealled “The Frameup,” Dena Cooper and company, as the headlined attraction. | parties, fongn and silly patter, is back again, out, they di particularly speciality take her song offering being Dreams.” | wine tive in an unserupulous way, is provid. | they | but, as the plot dwindles their mistake. d of th orram | d this w White's in which the che part, is repeatedly Vail, the prim ed a very favorable The music: encored, new donna, | Bob Sandberg sings “T" ‘Them All,” and Pauline Arthur, abe Sears and Corey Hunt have} | lively offerings. eee PALACE HIP The season's funniest villian a plainclothes man, or who has some scores to amusement at the Palace comedy dramatic playlet presented by in a Lee Barth, dialect comedian, tells! go a splendidly staged | presented «| dances include ballroom and whirl-| wind step riria| The | Duo, open the show, mal nearly 20 yea sufferers from tt efully The and gr dancing feature. Conlee Si; another ful pair, whe and pro- rmony st comedy 4 Ps Algerian ers and dancers who starting treat ment Regin right now to restore your injured nervous sys tem to. nor ‘The Kosine treatment has, for fully restored or fits. f not satisfied, sy will be re- | funded for treatise. Washington, D. C. Kosi > id in Seattle by Swilt's Pharmacy, a By ‘Best Glasses” | Millions— |Literally Millions Of people wear gle Homes in which one or more members | do not are the exception, | | But when non-wearers come to | | {t—and the majority do, sooner | or later—their desire should | be to | Get the Best Glasses Obtainable Ry “Best Glasses” we mean those accurately ground to our prescription and properly ad justed to the Individual face—a harmonious, becoming result, in- dicating Intelligent efficiency. Next to Carroll, Jeweler 325 Prxe STREET. TERMS START TONIGHT EVENING PREPARATORY For mature students, Get high school education and prepare for college while employed. College trained men teachers, Small classes, with individ- work, Special Y, M. C. A. methods, Accred- to all Northwest universities and colleges. EVENING ELEMENTARY For men of foreign birth to give them working knowledge of English and for those who desire to complete or review grammar school subjects. OTHER SCHOOLS: ‘ge Preparatory; Radio Telegraphy; Madison School for Boys; Evening Technical (opens Septem- ber 29); Automotive Schools; Commerce School, For full details call at room 210, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION (MLC. A. Fourth at Madison ua ited

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