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43978 TG Dregs ime ptt Row Repeated | ade Pyramid the ‘Treatment. SEND FOR FRER TRIAL. Mailed free in plain wrapper. It} Fou relie’ Ciet a #0-cent box itohing, protruding wetie "Nemerrholgs asd Fectal troubles. A single box often been suMctent in one it. Send coupon for free trial. RO sudstitute. pee, SeeMET, Mr. Ford Owner— Am placing on the m hew methog of rechar fnetos. If your car starts h the mérning or your lights are @im! come and see me. I will ®uarantes to double your voltage RECHA Recharge and Take Out Shorts, $10.00 It wilt pay you to investigute Machine Works 2015 THIRD AVE. Kk for Mr. Atwood The people are calling for efficienc grouped a number of skilled Denta company of equal partners. The results we have attained is each year A man who specializes reaches that point of perfection that is impossible fOr the smal! dentist or the dentist who depends upon hired help. Call and ict our specialist give tion~FREE PHONE ELLIOTT 4357. Realizing this we Surgeons and formed a shown in our growth 4 @ scientific examina OPEN EVENINGS (MOORE THEATR NIGHTS Le, 2Se, 500 Te, $1.00 MATS. lSe, 25c, 500 ALL WEEK | Here’s another big bill of tip-top vaudeville. It’s so good that you will have to hurry for your seats. JOHN HYAMS LEILA McINTYRE In a Novel Playlet, “MAYBLOOM.” WATTS & HAWLEY Laughs Coated With Melodies JAS. H. CULLEN “The Man From the West” CARTMELL HARRIS “Golfing With Cupid” THE VAN CELLOS “Foot Feats” : FOX & WARD Record Minstrel Team CHARLES & HENRY RIGOLETTO Assisted by the Swanson Sisters Around the World Topics of the Day Concert Orchestra sinenanentitiet _ A MATINEE EVERY DAY AT THE MOORE iatttirdtaiione io te MAIN Z22 3 § : $F H 3 3 x $ BY DOROTHY PHILLIPS (Well Known Screen Star While fect com the god beautiful f flexion a o and © pene screen star are the teeth hair and figure toa large | geeeeeeseeeseeesoreeeses | De ple w Stubborn Cough A Right Up Thie bame-made remedy le a won- der for quick reeulte, Rasily eed cheaply Here is a home-made syrup which millions of people have found to be reak unces of Pinex ¢ into a pint ‘and all the bottle with plain and shak r use clar or corn syrup syrup. Either way > sll pint—a family supply of much better h syrup than you could buy times the money. Keeps perfe 1 children love ite pleasant ta Pinex js a special and hizhly con compound of genuine Nor ¢ extract, known the world prompt ranes ntment ask your nets of pour Bottle healing effect abe a romptiy refund . Wayne t and moist wonderfully palatabl make them with F WAKING POWDE 4 phosphate leavener that means eweetne holesomeness Does not contain alum THE ROGERS COMPANY Seattle—Tacoma Rheumatism? Remember that BAUME /ANALGESIQUE BENGUE will bring quick relief. Directions with every tube Thee, Leeming & Ce., B. T. PEPE POPES ODP E TEP OOED Mystery? Not at All, Says Dorothy; Plain People Can Look Attractive extent by the individual, They are & matter of physical and personal care, and are at the command of any woman Care of Hair are contemplating a ca ther the stage reen begin at once to take especial care of your hair |} If one should ask thing the name “Mary brings to mind, nine annwe true that one of the mot lreer on « or ® what the first] Pickford” m picture actr hair, but it re this hair ts ®o long | You wilt pho with wtraight hair, if y le out a few lea once a week, be given a thoro juse of tar soap hair should mpoo, and the is expecially bene- p and hair the first rning and the last and you rry abe will hav neernl tograpt value your Beautiful Hands always beer pet r all hands wer tially pretty and that shapen palma and f from improper > not mean t are - bea © exsen- ugly, mie-/ come | vuree, I] that there © that are more/ but with the] girl's hands} » others rf treatment any jean be made nico. A solution of r and lemor ee water Juice is a ound that I myself use every jning before retiring in argeer keep my hands tn goad egnaditic | Nelis are an index tw cha and they are so often negiec |mcreen dtrector objects 3 strenuously to the long: he does to A happy medi giycer- pared to the qu wa | 1m| the most bt one of important exeentials for star to poaves Think a succens-| good! back © warrant! Im fave cannot nam stare who th ugly, bad t done, that’s a 0% walk in life good teeth cided RB the « day axset thoro three ne good trong. ce bed at nigh of keeping the mouth clear COAL MINERS MARKING TIME rs of the d St Diatrict Att lert C. Saunders seruon that duction must go on” today with a | efusal to return to the mines | intil disputed probierns of wages and| her working conditions are thresh: | ed out and the deadlock broken in j the Kast i ‘olowing « statewide referendum | | of miners, Ernest Newsham, | district secretary of the United Mine | Workers, office | and informed the latter that the men | vad voted to remain idly as individ: uals until the whole matter is| “ottied. Newsham said he looked for| settiement within a “very short! I time." | | Miners are capable of remaining | | out three months if necessary, New: | jtham is reported to have told | Saunders, He said the 14 per cent wage inerease offered by the United States fucl administration was un- acceptable because the operators had | previously offered 20 per cent in- jerease. The deadiock would be end- ed, he sald, if the 81 per cont pro posed by Secretary of Labor Wilson was allowed, together with certain other regulations, Rumors that mine operators in tend to reopen the mines with hon. union men under guard of general troops was denied by N. D. Moore, spokesman for tho operators. went to Saunders | y |foul an ~|tion pt parte |this is the « Also a| watery orning | tionally strong sunlight is SHIPYARD WORKER'S WIFE FLAYS RADICALS TACOMA WOMAN TELLS TRUTHS THAT APPLY TO SEATTLE AS WELL Read What a Wife Had to Say in a Letter to The Tacoma Tribune A Shipyard Worker’s Wife Asks Questions Editor The News Tribune: It is interesting to note the wild ef- forts of the Central Labor Council trying to bring harmony among the unions, Nothing can be accom- plished by their six-hour sessions as long as such men as they now have remain at the head, or union meetings are conducted along the lines they are. Glance over the names of the Cent: Labor Council or Metal Trades Council and see how many good old Amer- ican names you can find. The ma- jority have a pronounced foreign savor. From whom do they re- ceive their power to call a strike involving 6,000 men without the vote of these men? Or to hold a conference with the Todd officials and declare the strikers are stand- ing pat, when the strikers are al- lowed no voice in the matter? A great majority of the men were satisfied with their pay. Some have honestly said they didn't really earn what they received. 1 know men whose foremen have actually told them not to work so hard, their jobs would last longer. If allowed to vote the men would willingly go back at the same wage scale. Everyone knows the strike ended last February when the men were allowed to vote. They were allowed to vote when the union treasuries were ex- hausted, and the officials saw their salaries vanishing. Why won't the Metal Trades Council be honest with the men? In the strike of last winter, the men were told that the American Federation of Labor sanctioned that strike. The men were re- quested to register twice a week for strike benefits. When the benefits were not paid and men began asking questions, they were told the truth—the strike had not been sanctioned by the A. F. of L. When the present strike was called, the men were given the im- pression that the government, through the shipping board, had broken its word to the laboring men. A few weeks ago the repre- sentatives of our state investigat- ed this report. The shipping board stated it had sent a member to the “tonference in California as an eye witness only, and he had never signed the agreement. Is it any wonder that the men will not at- tend their union meetings when the officials continually deceive them? President Gompers of the A. F. of L. attributes the present unrest in the nation to prohibition! That is an insult to American manhood. We have had prohibition in this state for several years—and the unrest just lately. The radicals are continually telling the men they are slaves to capital—slaves to corporations. Rather would I say, both labor and capital are slaves to unionism! The bonds of slavery forged by unionism are robbing Americans of their most cherished liberties. If the Dec- laration of Indepgndence and the Constitution of the United States were distributed as freely as Bol- shevik pamphlets it would to some extent counteract their evil. It would be well for all union men to memorize the principles upon which the Constitution was found- ed. Then they would realize when their union is infringing on their rights. What were the principles? “We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, in- sure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves and to our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution of the United States of America.” Today, 132 years after the drawing up of that Constitution, free-born American descendants of the fathers of the Constitution, can’t work in an American ship- yard without going to the business agent of a union-——-who bears a foreign name, if not foreign born himself—and paying $1 for a per- mit to work. In a few months that American is compelled to join a union, which costs him from $8 to $65. Then he must pay from $1 to $2 a month for the privilege of keeping his position. The own- ers of the Todd corporation in- vested their money in Tacoma, giving employment to thousands of men—yet are not permitted to hire one man of their own free will. The Metal Trades Council not only forced the men to stop work- ing, but tried to compel them to register twice a week for strike benefits. Think of it. Americans forced to report like criminals on probation. After reading the letters in your paper a few nights ago, signed by members of the Labor Council, one would imagine the unions were great institutions of mercy—doing philanthropy work. They have given aid to 2,500 families. The unions only give to families that are destitute. Why are these fam- ilies destitute? Who are responsi- ble? The unions! If the ship- yard was in operation today these families would not have been de- prived of their weekly pay checks. We have Liberty bonds and a small bank account, saved from my husband’s wages from the shipyard. Therefore, we couldn't expect anything but strike bene- fits paid by the A. F. of L. Isn’t that encouraging to young people? The strikers were receiving from $25 a week up. Union officials declared that wasn’t a living wage. Yet in the six weeks of this strike we have received less than $20 benefits. I wonder does the A. F. of L. consider that a living wage? The nation is horrified at the cowardly assassination of our sol- diers in Centra Is it any won- der that Puget Sound is branded a Bolshevik center? What else can we expect when the Central Labor Council of Tacoma regards such criminals as martyrs and call them “political prisoners’? I know of one so-called political prisoner whose union sends him money for luxuries. Does the American Legion of Tacoma know that an I, W. W. pennant hung un- til very recently in the Central Labor Hall, 13th and Broadway? Lately we hear of house-clean- ing among the unions, weeding out the reds. When a building be- comes old and dilapidated, and a menace to the public, it is ordered removed. Unions have outlived their usefulness and have become a monstrous machine of oppres- sion. It is high time employers and employes working together throw off this irksome yoke. I hope the day is not far off when Todd shipyard, and every industry in Tacoma, paints a sign similar to this across the building: “An American Plant for Americans. Apply at Office.” And raise the American Flag, emblem of Free- dom, above it. An employers’ and employes’ club would be more ef- ficient than a union. Working and planning together would bring them into closer relationship. If the officers of such an organiza- tion continued to work it would eliminate the high-salaried offi- cials, business agents and walking delegates. If a man has a griev- ance, real or imaginary, let him go direct to his employer and talk it over, man to man. At present he must go to his union business agent, who will appoint an investi- gating committee. Why not have an industrial committee in Con- gress to adjust labor conditions, and set the wage scale? This would eliminate strikes and labor troubles. Radicals would say, “Oh, but labor wouldn’t get a fair deal. Congress is owned and controlled by capital.” Mr. Radical, if you are foreign-born, and lived here for years without taking out your papers, keep still, or take the next boat back to your fatherland. If you are an American, you and I have the same voice in this gov- ernment as a millionaire. We each have one vote. The*men in Con- gress were put there by us. If they do wrong, we have the pow- er to impeach them, and elect oth- ers. If capital controls the vote, then you and your kind have sold your birthright. The radicals de- sirous of destroying this nation are beating their heads against a stone wall. In spite of their asser- tion that all workmen are Bok sheviki, we have enough true Americans willing to take up arms to uphold their belief, like Tingoln, “that this government of the peo- ple, for the people and by the peo- ple wg not perish from the earth.” MRS. R. P. ELKMAN, Wife of a Shipyard Worker. Do Not These Truths' About the Situation in Tacoma Apply With Equal Force to Seattle? Associated Industries of Seattle i the tender gums in good con- ‘The even are th alac ture et th care Don't ht a rickest mean Reading to weak, in exoep- very bad direct, high- eyes as ie also a of od artificta jing on at only rules required to keep|ene ot \Elderly People Have a our ‘REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to tntroduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest an¢ strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; doors ‘are the best known jes of obesity All work guaranteed for 15 years. seg and e' teeth seme day. jest of our oar prunges patronene you can bite corn off the cob; guaran- * toed 1b years. EXAMINATION $2.00 Amalram Pega Extracting Impresst tamination and advice fee = pose len of Our Plate and Bridge Werk. We Stand the Good satisfaction. ‘ak Ser coming to our office, be eure sail giving goo Bring this ad with you. Daily Health Problem Stomach muscles and digestive organs slow to act as age advances Most people find the years slip- ping by without realising it, until suddenly confronted with the fact that they can flo longer digest everything they would tke to eat. then becomes their daily task to avoid what they know to be chronic constipation. When exercise amd light diet fail, it Will be necessary to resort to arti« ficlal means, Strong physies and) cathartics, however, are not ad- visable for elderly people. They act} too powerfully, and a feeling of weakness results. What is needed is a laxative con- taining effective but mild proper- ties, This is best found in Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, which is a combihation of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, It acts gently and without griping, and used a few days, will train the digestive organs to do their work naturally again, without other aid. Dr, Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has been on the market since 1892, and was the private formula of Dr. W. B. Caldwell, who ts himself past 80 years of age, and still active in bis profession. It can be bought at any drug store for 50c and $1 a bottle, MMW the latter containing enough to last even a large family many months. It is @ trustworthy preparation, In spite of the fact that Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, there being over 600,000 bottles sold ¢ach year, many who need its benefits have not yet used it, If you have not, send your name and address for a free trial bottle to Dr. W. B, Caldwell, 511 Washington st., Monticello, IN. Open Sundays From ® te 12 for Werking Preepie aia OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS ““% _ Ser NIVERSITY OT. Oppesite Fraser-Paterson Gn Bargains Sewing Machines In order to make room for a car load shipment of new White Rotaty Sewing Machines, we are forced to close out our second: hand stoek before December 15th. Below are a few of our ex: ceptional bargains: Also a lot of box top and drop head used machines from $7.00 to $15.00, Hemstitching and picoting by expert operator, Ma- chines rented for $3.00 per month, Machine Co. 415 Union St. One Block East of Postoffice