The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 6, 1919, Page 4

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~ THE ee ba eetntae st wa NOVEMBER 6, 1919. ” JAPAN'S WOMEN | OUT FOR VOTES 'Eight- Hour ‘Day and child Labor Laws Wanted ) SMOKER FREE TO VETERANS Student Service Men Will Join in Parade Great t Victory for Barbers; John Mows Down His Beard asty Colds Ease at Once ret dose of ‘‘Pape’s Cold Compound” relieves dis- ‘tress—Three doses break up colds—No quinine! The versit student Washi to the band ot the Uni offered parade commit Veterans of or the Armistic ommittee ha my CHAMBERLAIN pondent) Votes amin ohit-| BY DON (United Press Staff Corr WASHINGTON for Women, an eight-hour day age limit ite rervic Nov, 6 pont for num working for deck ed ts tion « er This is the slogan of the modern studer Mra, K Tanaka International Labor an interview eveity headed t wh woman of Japan. ta th Jol to the anference, declared ’ elr own Pt atay stuffed Ag and snuffiing! A dose of ff Compound” taken every two ‘until three doses are taken Breaks up a cold and ends all misery. first dose opens clogged-up and air passages of _beaa .uit blow Aning; relieves foverishne stiffness Pape’s Cold Compound". ts, the quickest, surest relief known and osts only a few gents at drug stores, It acts without assistance, Tastes nice, Contains no quinina, Insist on Pape's! act wneor band, the a, in * Mor also furnish musi ice men, band men, are equested to appear at 1616% Third m., fore rehearsal, unable to attend to bring their bar and play with the Foreign Wars’ band in Pape's ing, d Veterar will * whe sald, rps “The women of Nippon “are growing from thelr old ‘ life. Instead of a Japanese maiden \ wor standing coyly behind a background of nd chrysanthe an energetic woman of affairs, who has abolished | are “| the traditional flowing sleeve of the ted kimono as a first step in dreas re . * rms, and is going out after other : ver Occur to Yo 1?” : “Woman suffrage te some way off, | “Already we maxing progress. | Tehoku, the government university at Sendai, has opened its gates to |women, where before {it admitted jony men. ‘hie year, Wasada unl | versity, at Tokio, let down the bar | riers. “Home Veterans nday at 1 thone re a tru Veteran the pa blossoma cherry ave., mums, we now ve ‘ a. re ine Vive boxing bouts have been ar ranged for the smoker and the samen of the contestants will be an not later than Sunday o main event will be betwe cM and Stanley Fitzgerald Every veteran of the war with Germany is invited to att guest of Roowe post That it’s foolish to put up with an ordinary chew, when it doesn’t cost any ° more to get real tobacco Caston satisfaction. Every day more men dis- cover that a little chew of real good tobacco lasts } longer and gives them real contentment. There’s nothing like it. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW gut up in hoo styles CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT SPECIALTY Years of ex- perience tn fitting e mekiasg glasses, and cur Jow operating ex- oo ggemenry pa to make better | Classes for less ave = ss Mom 0477. is a long fine-cut tobacco OFFICE WOMEN FORM UNION IN DETROIT, DETROIT, Nov. 6.--Office women in Detroit have formed the Stenog: | |Faphers’, Typewriters’, Bookkeepers’ and Assistants’ union. They want a minimum wage fixed. The present average for Detroit is aAweek. | | SCOTLAND" 'S FARMERS BUYING MOTOR CARS | EDINBURG, Nov. 6.— Farmers! im Scotland are buying motor cars| ‘and farm carts are now scarce on) market day, i conditions also are chang Modern cooking appliances are adopted everywhere, Japa ing being cooking schools.” Mra, Tanaka, who attended Stan ford and Chicago universities, ts a | professor of sociological research at Nippon university A laboring man knows the value of a dollar and & shopping woman knows the value of ninetyight SHE DARKENED HER GRAY HAIR Tells How She Did It With » Home Maile Remedy Mrs, BE. TH. Boots, a well-known resident of Buchanan county, who darkened her gray hair, made the following statement: “Any lady or gentleman can darken their 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 1 ounce of bay rum, one small box of Barbo Compound and \/ ounce of glycerine, These Ingredi- ents can be purchased at any drug | store at very little cost. Apply to the hair every other day until the gray hair is darkened mufficiently. It does not color the scalp; is not greaxy and does not rub off. It will make a gray-haired person look 10 to 20 years younger —Advertisement. | (MPTOMS OF ANEMIA, "A DISEASE THAT ROBS VICTIMS BY STEALTH ions of Thin Blood That Could Be Easily Corrected) 2 Stealing the Energy and Happiness of Many Men and Women in This and Neighboring States fs so prevalent that in special schools for ane are being established. mother should know how to the symptoms of anemia, @isease makes it approach so ly and so stealthily that it is mi far advanced before it is Anemia literally means and it is the cause of and loss in this oe at this time. anemia is thought to be Jack of sunlight, to improper mt and insufficient out-of- + It is most common among ‘who are confined indoors by tions and among those j do not cat regularly or who do| a proper diet. Out for These Symptoms one general symptom of ane- pallor. The cheeks gradually their color, the lips become With this loss of color there mes @ tendency to fatigue, a palpi of the heart and breathless- ‘Sfter slight exertion, with occa headaches. in health the lips are not ally any redder than the rest of gkin, but they are transparent Allow the red blood to show hh. The part of the blood that At its color is the red corpuscles | ‘these corpuscles are made red the hemoglobin they contain. ore when the blood is deficient bin the lips are pale. Thin ts not to be confused with im blood, which causes the lips to purple. yy are pale lips associated with of energy and ambition? is a part of the balance of life ae globe that one constituent of oxygen, sustains animal life ote constituent, carbonic gas, supports plant life. What one form of life is poison In the lungs the blood | of the poisonous carbonic and takes up oxygen from we breathe. The part of the that picks up the oxygen 1s the Je and the part of the Je that does the work is the bin. It follows that blood in hemoglobin cannot carry “the life-giving oxygen to the tissues ‘and immediate lack of vigor results. Any Giri Can Tell this condition 1s corrected with ease that no one should re- longer than a few days. iiliams’ Pink Pills supply bin to the blood with such ity that a microscopic exam- ee after a few days’ treatment HM actual percentage of in- the corpuscular count. But, {9 the improvement that "rie care std Any the erin’ reiness Pills are making her blood rich and] red. In ordinary anemic conditiona, in- | cluding the anemia that afflicts girls in their "teens, Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are all the medicine required | Fresh air, sunlight, proper food end | drink taken without haste, a little fest after meals and no worry wil! make recovery complete. Tacoma Woman's Experience Mra. Cina Demarais, of No. 2801! South C street, Tacoma, Wash., had | la breakdown in health as a result of overwork and didn’t know what it | was to feel well until she tried Dr. | Williams’ Pink Pills, She says: | “I broke down completely -two) years ago, and was unable to gain any relief. My stomach seemed to be played out and I was reduced to ja diet of eggs and milk, and even this- caused distress, My heart | Jumped so that I grew frightened |and it seemed to me, in my nervous | state, as though I was afflicted with | serious heart trouble. Sometimes I |could hardly get my breath, and be: came exhausted after wniking a block. My rest was Interrupted and I seldom got n full night's sleep and was tired and nervous all the time. There were pains across my back sister in Minn., how badly I was feeling, and she advised me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, ax they had helped her. I procured a box and began the |treatment. In a few days T noticed| |that my appetite was improving land I was able to eat heartily with ‘out suffering from gas spells. I con tinued the treatment and soon my strength returned. I gained flesh, too, and it was a red letter day when I walked all the way to the home of my daughter, a trip which | I had been unable to undertake for jmonths. I sleep well now, no longer |have pains or heart trouble and feel as well as ever. I cannot recom. |mend Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills too highly.” Anemic From the Age of Six “I was anemic from the age of | atx,” #ays Mra. Bertha McCombs, of | |No, 2123 Ellendale Place, Los Ange |les, Cal., “and in spite of many medi. | cines which I tried from time to| |time, I could not gain strength. 1 had #0 lttle blood that my skin was as white as chalk Dizzy spella came on suddenly and sometimes I fainted, As years pasted and I continued in a state of semi-invalidiam, I became depressed and deapaired of ever get jting well. I wag very nervous, my jappetite was poor and I had frequent | headaches which caused sleepless: | ness. “T read about Dr. Williams’ Pink | Pilla one day and was impressed by what they had done for others whose symptoms were very much like mine. After taking two boxes I felt consid: | N. stronger and continued the | taking six boxes of the remedy } Dr. treatment, growing stronger all the time. My color returned aa my blood improved and the dizsy spells and headaches became lees frequent enti] they disappesred nurely I geep well, my are strong, and I} have nev t an well as | do now. I firmly eve that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pilla saved my lfe. They are} + mily medicine in my home now! ‘and I wouldn't be without them.” Her Blood Was Like Water “When I was a girl of seventeen suffered from chlorosis,” relates Mrs. Ethel Taylor, who lives at No, 2654] Monroe avenue, Ogden, Utah. “From that tirne until I was twenty-three years old, I constantly grew weaker. I was very pale and thin and my ner ves were so unstrung that I had spella of extreme nervousness and twitching. My stomach was badly upset and I couldn't even keep lime water down. My blood was so thin that when I pricked myself with a pin the blood had the appearance of water, I was growing feebler day by day. “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pilla were ree ommended to my parents by a friend | of our family and I started the treat ment. I began to improve after the first box. In a few weeks I could eat toast and gradually my stomach 1 .|became so strong that I could eat a good meal without distress, began to take on weight Then 1 After my nerves no longer have complexion improved and my gained strength. 1 nervous spells and sleep well and feel refreshed in the morning. I have three healthy children today and feel very grateful for the benefit I r ved from Dr, Williams’ Pink Pilla” Keep Your System Toned Up Keep your system Williams’ Pink that once distressed you harmless, exposure will bring no} fears of rheumatism and neuralgia and even rerm diseases need hardly to be drenade Dr, Williams’ gestion, correct toned up with and foods will bel Pink Pilla neatet ai the lassitude, the palpitation of the heart, shaky nerves and the pallor of the face and lips that are the result of thin, impure blood. Try Dr, Williams’ anemia, rheumatism, vousness you are not in the best physical con dition and cultivate a resistance that will keep you well and strong, a box from the nearest drug store and begin this treatment now. Write For Instructive Booklet Your own druggist sells Dr, Wil Mama’ Pink Pills or they will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 conta per box by the Dr, Williams Meine Co,, Box 1003, Schenectady, . ¥, Write today for the tree book- let, “Building Up the Blood.” Pink Pills for neural; ner. Ta. | could not sleep well and | Take them as a tonic it Get | |nese girls are going to government | | | ‘The barbers have won a great vice tory John Phillip Sousn tas come out | jim the open—ho has mowed down his| beard. | His olf friends won't recognize | “The March King when he comes to Seattle next Monday with hin 65/ je@kilied bandamen and four soloists | Everybody from Bangor to Belling ham t« acquainted with Sousa, hav- ing been introduced thru the family | graphophone. And he has always been the dot | of the boys who play the wind tn-| struments, They all wore beards in| the old days because John Phillip Soura set the fashion, Now they'll | make occasional trips to the barber shop. Son of Soldier Awny back in 1892 Sousa began! band tours, He has gone to the} ends of the world with his highly | trained organizations, playing a total of more than 10,000 concerts and| traveling 850,000 milea, Sousa was years of age this | week. His father was a bandsman in | the civil war. During the world war} Sousa conducted the famous band} at the Great Lakes Naval Training} | station. Seattle will hear Sousa's band at} the Arena Monday afternoon at 2:20] and Monday evening at 8:20. In the| afternoon his band will play hin new componitions, “American Maid,” “An | American Wedding March at the suggestion of Mzn.| | Oliver Cromwell Ficid of the Amer } |ican Relief Legion) and his new) march, “fabre and Spurs.” in ad. dition to his old favorite marches as encores, In te evening Sousa's new } | compositions, “Impressions the Movies," “The Golden Star" (dedi-| jeated to Mra. Theodore Roosevelt), | "Showing Off Before Company” hia new march, “Bullets and Bayo- nets," are on the list. Of course the organization plays numerous com. positions by other famous componers VOCATIONAL BOARD IS | MATRIMONIAL BUREAU WASHINGTON, Ne Sam's board for ve tion is a matriménial bureau: gie men admitted to training draw $80 m month allowance. Married men get $115. When a disabled man finds he Is eligible for training he gets him a wife. | poxed 6.— Uncle ational educa | SHOT HUSBAND AND \\ KISSED THE WIFE) BELVIDERE, N. J., Nov. 6- Voradi, who was found guilty |murder in the first degree, kissed |the wife of Joe Zoldl after he had \ehot and killed the husband, accord ing to the 12-year-old daughter of the slain man. Joe of} UNITED KINGDOM MAY ADOPT 24-HOUR CLOCK LONDON, Nov, 6—The United m is considering the adoption -hour clock for official and| One p. m, would then | i { | public be 14 o'clock JUST SEE HOW POSLAM HELPS OKIN OVERNIGHT Poslam heals suf possibility jence with Posiam |value. For instance, apply jon some affected part at ni |the morning, your own levidence of ita healing work |trouble was slight imple or In- flamed epot—the chances are that it has disap, If a virulent eruptional disorder, {t should be subdued, #0 much #o that you will want Posiam to keep right on Hold everywhere. For free sample Write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th Bt, N ity. Poslam Soap is a dally treat to tender skin, Contains Posiam. soothes, refreshes and | John Phillip Sousa With Sousa’s band will come Flor ence Hardeman, violinist Mary Baker, soprano; H. Benne Henton, saxophone soloist, and Frank Simon, cornetiat. Miss Anneita Croman, one of the famous “Miner Girls,” is now demonstrating her de- \licious Pearls of Wheat Pud- ding and golden-brown “flap- jacks” at Allen & Neupert Grocery Stall 24 Corner Market Miss Croman will continue her demonstration on Friday land Saturday of this week. A ‘flapjack’ Turner free with the purchase of two or more pack-| ages of cereals. People Demand Law and BUTLER DRUG CO. Backing Up Our Goods back are nat We alwa drugs, toilet nad therefore “Hf getter drugs were nold—we would sell them she Thermos Bottles Man Who Takes His Lunch ; mit #108 the ine For the 9.50 n Bot- ‘ Rubber Goods rt Rapia- 6 Hub it If you can't ome in just Ph | ELLIOTT 49 We deliver anywhere in the atinetive Order BUTLER. | DRUG Ce A CHA E, Manager Orders IN cr Ladies’ Musical Club Presents RUDOLPH Order, Says Coolidge The recent Borton | EDITOR'® NOTR ampaien ning Fe BY CALVIN COOLIDGE 1 (Governor of Massachusetts.) | (wr for the United Prem) | | BOSTON, Nov. 6—For nearly three | | centurtes there bas been an unshaken determination on the part of the Massachusetts people to preserve their Hberties by living under the law Wherever you touch the funda- me sentiments of her people, | whether ft be in the cabin or in the Mayflower, drawing up the famous con . or in their resistance to the unlawful acts of Gov. Andros or in the sterner mood, exhibited at the Horton tea party and at Concord bridge, against those who attempted) | to usurp the authority of the govern- | ment, but most of all in the constitu- | “| ton of the commonwealth, with its) [noble declaration of rights, adopted | while the fires of the revolutionary } were burning most fiercely, there you find exhibited anew the acknowledg- | | ment of the authority of the law and | & determination to live by To a people with such traditions, | who had been the first to respond to | the call of President Lincoln for vol- unteers to maintain the American government, thetr maintenance of| thelr own government and the! authority of their own matters come asa matter of cours, The people of the commonwealth, without distine- |tion, realized that this was their cause. They knew that the only refuge of the weak and defenseless was tn the authority of the law; that the only protection of life and prop- | erty was in the stability of the gov- ernment. There was no prejudice against or- anized labor, no disposition to op-| pone it. The humane laws of our! state have been enacted with a view | to protecting those who toll, and rep- | resent an expression of public optn- | SAYS CHURCH IS STARVING NEW YORK, Nov. 6.—(y United | Press.)—"The church is starving to| death on the crumbs dropped from | the tables of its children,” the Rev.{ Duncan M. Genns, rector of 8t.| ‘Thomas church, Brooklyn, eald today | in an arraignment of the present| “money-mad age” and an appeal to banish profiteers from the church. | One clergyman of his acquaintance | is “covering his nakedness with the discarded clothing of a wealthy par- | ishioner,” Genns said. Pleading for the people to forsake “luxurious living” brought on by} general prosperity, he urged more} liberal support of the church by wealthy members. © are many churches in my .” Genns declared, which have | millionaires “who believe their du | ties end when they give $10—when/ asked.” “The present so-called prosperity is |eucking the blood of every one it touches, Genns id. “People are | living upon luxuries, not necessities.” | |FOND OF LADY BARBER, | SO HE WRECKS SHOP CHICAGO, Nov, 6-—Charlie Par-! |ker was attracted by Nellie Knox, | manager of a “lady barber” shop in| |North Clark st ellie failed to| procate, Then Ch his| foot thru a plate glass |threw a chunk of glass jand fractured a mirror. |to the judge. re at Nellie} Case is up | SMOKE LAW BROKEN, MAY CLOSE SCHOOLS CHICAGO, Nov. 6—Because 12} | Chicago schools are persistent vio-| jlators of the smoke ordinance, they | may be closed by order’of the san-| |itary bureau | IMPOSSIDLE The man who thin mponall Spells “failure” in his minds For he nurses but « neg bought, And to success In blind, ‘The way to k In to banish ie from your bral Uniens it ge It Ife wil ed mm And at Teen aa wilt corre. We're positive as to prices, And we will save On each new SUIT, and } been not changed and will desire to promote pines of th commonwealt! first achuvett th which ha change im Sts welfare and w earner the When thin ¢ I stated that dito? © publi 3 by lawn ‘That exhibited in means exactly that The people of Masnachusetts have supported their constitution and thetr laws, because under them they ¢ enjoyed a government that has n them ample protection. that as extended the blessings and pines al prosperity, has glori « Dem hed government they has been administered with right and truth and justice. Knowing these things, they scorned thoxe who de-| nied them and turned to thone who| dectared them fon not the tarted was de- uthority it had titution and determination has this clion, It} rover been p her ac her cor and righteous- to their because believe it Celebrated Swiss Pianist at the— dé METROPOLITAN Tuesday Eve., Nov. 11 Prices—75c to $2.00 General Sale Thursday, Noy.¢ The monthly meeting will be held on Friday Evening, November h, at the Fine Arts Auditorium 1213 Fourth Avenue Musical program of excellence will be provided. Admission Free 8 O'Clock (Nationa DENTISTS THIRD & PIKE PLATES $10 CROWNS If such moderate den- tal charges appeal to you we invite you to come up and find out for yourself that the QUALITY OF OUR WORK IS AS HIGH AS THE PRICES ARE LOW. A consultation will not obligate you in any way whatever. “Quick Service for Out-of-Town Patrons” . METROPOLITAN "7Startinc Wed., Nov. STARTING MATINEE SATURDAY ONLY JOHN CORT PRESENTS THE SEASUNS SENSATIONAL SUCCESS °36" CHORUS Music By Suvio Wy, e VF y HER PERFECT \ ae Sunday, Nov. 9th SPLO-VLO* in ap and no © ity, youth, sunge, sparklin i Iful, startling gow oh

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