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out of city, 806 per month; 2 months S months, '32.70; year, $6.00, in. the | | of Washing Outalde the state, | Pe | r month, $4 * months, or per year. 1 oar Your Debt to Actors | Actors have given unselfishly of their time and energy fe for centuries for the benefit of others. They perform times | Without number to help raise funds for others. During | the war prodapiy every member of the profession in America ~ worked without pay to help the government, the Red Cross, or this or that war fund. No class of people is called upon more frequently than the Te entertainers to help the rest of us, ‘ow Seattle, and the rest of the nation, rtunity to help the actors. will have an ext Friday, thruout the land, stage folk will cofibine to present benefit performances to help the Actors’ Fund of America, which sustains the home for old and indigent Stage folk on Staten Island. #A big benefit performance will be staged at the Metro- itan, beginning at 11:30 a. m. Harry Lauder will be - et headliner, and there wil! be acts from every playhouse ’ in the city. : a Seattle ought to fill the theatre to overflowing. Cer tainly we should be eager to help the actors help themselves, and that’s what they're trying to do. Every year there are tragedies behind the footlights. Sickness and poverty claims those who have spent their lives making us happy. To care for these aged and ill people the Actors’ Home is maintained. But the home has always been short of funds. Certainly the rest of us should attempt to be at the Metropolitan next Friday noon—or send the family Now that the “muny” golf club house has burned down, there will undoubtedly be a number of family re- unions the next few days. Daily it becomes more apparent that the people and not senate will speak the final word on whether or not the States is to join the League of Nations. Now comes tor Lodge and say “All I ask is that we may have oe, opportunity to carry the reservations before the Amer-| jean ple. To that great and final tribunal would I To this commendable sentiment, Lodge adds the ominous! revelation: “I wish to carry the league reservations into Such is clearly the politicians’ intentions. Lodge's state followed his conference with Will H. Hays, chairman the republican national committee. Here is a situation must not be tolerated. If the League of Nations is to become the big issue of the next political ip it will be fought with a fury that will subordinate | critical and more important domestic issues, such as) th prices and their offspring, industrial unrest. The he x e nothing except the league question. It would produce reconstruction program, no solution for the railroad m, no program for abating unrest; domestic issues} uld be obscured by the smoke screen on the league battle. bly the league should be decided directly by le and it should be decided promptly without wait- Tor the political campaign. The way is perfectly clear, proposed national referendum. The people, thru @ mdum vote, would settle the league question as ly as in an election and also more intelligently, for issué would stand clear and alone, unclouded by other With the league settled by a referendum and out the way, decks would be cleared for domestic issues and ic issues the politicians would have to stand o1 il, as quite obviously should be the case. | Seattle was incorporated as a municipality 50 years ago today. And it doesn't need any monkey glands to keep it as young as ever. It is still growing. Lecturing Them Six hundred and forty-three Boston grocers, butchers and lars, charged with short weighting, were assembled in auditorium at the State House one afternoon recently the state commissioner of standards, and— LECTURED ON HONESTY! Then they were turned loose. : - Can you tell us, dear reader, what is the difference be- m picking one’s pocket, as it is done by the uncouth ikpocket, and picking one’s pocket as it is done by the eight seller of food? > If it is right and just that we punish the pocket-picking sho eigher by lecturing him, then we shquid punish all es in that way. If it is right to imprison those who thrusting their hands into one’s pockets, so too ould it be right to imprison those who rob by shortweight. ing AFTER he has been placed behind prison bars, ) © You can tell there is no profiteering in food by the fact that those who deal in food buy more jewels every month. | Senator Newberry indicted. Now watch all the Fords get chesty and hog the road. Now that the sugar bowl is empty, you can use it as a place to store your coal supply. Polls remain open till 8 p.m. Be sure to vote. What about tho: ugly skin blemishes? Why don’t you get rid ofthem? Be free to enjoy intended it to be—radiant and healthy. life—not unhappy because It is also excellent for wherever you gopeopleare the h and general toilet noticing your poor com- use. The Resinol medica- tion it contains makes it an ideal cleanser for the hands which should be washed many times,a day as a safeguard to health. At all druggists and toi- let goods counters, plexion. RESINOL SOAP is just the help you need in that direction. Its wholesome lather ggots the impurities out of the pores and helps a to make the skin as nature _Resinol Soap Discriminating min like Resinal Shaving Stich be- . camst it soathes and refrehes 4 the face, while supplying a rich, creamy, mowdrying ashe. be would be that the next presidential election would |’ | If we must lecture the shortweight thief, let us do the), EVERETT TRUE —By CONDO a ———— EVERY TIMG L ATTEMPT To PASS THIS BIRD WITH MY CITT PLIVVER HE Speens ve HIS POWERFUL SIX, ANO THA Resr of THe TIMG HO LOARBS AND LETS MG \lear His pus ! eee | i JM, f FLATTENING OUT BOTH Your REAR TIRES £ WASB GOING TO VENTICATSG WUR HATIU - er TM : —" FRESH AIR ralik Althe ph of th hearty have long known | of If dinner js the it consinta of & ema enormous value of fresh alr in maintaining health, the surpass: | meat or stew, two vegetables, fruit ing importance of fresh ait still | bread and butter, glans of mi . not realized by the large majority a dessert. For supper he w have of the people is rare to find the! a soup, alr of offices and w as it should be; and this is sometimes soft exe or potato, shops as fresh | breed and butter and a wlan of A child of & should be in the case when rooms ‘ ock and should crowded, ag measured by accepted| Waking until 7 or § o'clock the next standarde. imorning. Ary disturbance of sound The evil effects insufficient continuous sleep, night terrors fresh air are atrikingly seen when | Wetting or sleeplommnens should be large assemblages of people gather Vestiquted by the family doctor in @ poorly ventilated hall, and as —- the #ymptom: liar to “UNCLE SAM, M. will answer, na eng omy pty pany either in this cotemme of by wail everyone, we need not dwe! pn Rh ye totems telniog Tho i! effects are much te only to hygiene, sanitation and the when sedentary Workers spend day pFeventiom ef disease, It will be site ventilated 1a impossible for bim te answer ques. | peer yee lene of @ purely personal mature, of | a bit bent! te \edividasl! diseases, re not over seep in on them. striking they are not ine tor NFORMATION KDITOR, SATHE BAD AIR S Pubtle Health Service, r - « ; ye he c re i * wetoe. , € Sure aot wun ana TOMORROW should NS the 34 of December, in 69 Bt exceed 65 degrees Fa C, the Reman senate published and that the humidity should |}@ general thankegiving in the name be 60 per cent of the natura-|of Cloero for preserving the city jtion po | from a Catalinian conspiracy in order to maintain these condi | In 1610, on the 34 of December tions, it ently necessary to} the new hell of the cathedral at exhauet the al alr from the| Lincoln, called “Great Tom.” was workr ' any of fans, in ad-!piaceed im the steeple. It is the ition t ing an abundance of | largest bell in England, being seven |~ fresh air, The simplest and surest | feet in diameter at the mouth. way to secure the latter ia to con On the 34 of December, in 1 stantly keep the shop windows open! daring attempt was made to and let fresh alr from outside. | sinate King Joseph of Portugal. Aw Bert aps in the future w have| tho plot was laid to the Jesuits, all true open-air shops, modeled some-| Jewuite were expelled from Portugal |what after the pavilions used to and thelr property was confiscated In 1750. helter inp te in sana | on the 34 of December, welng [the first opera was sung in Amer | ‘The striking results obtained {n|icg, It wae the “Beggars’ Opera,” many parts of the country with! by Jonn Gay, and was produgpd 1 open-air schoolrooma whow how val! New York ' uable is the stimulu applied by ant” On the ad of Decembe TAT of fremh at i the state of Delaware adopted the | axercinen with wide |. 1814, on the 84 of December cera) times, cach {the Mayor of Lyons, Fra re lished an order forbidding all artists uired i« more than [to engrave, print or paint the like | news of Napoleon Bonaparte compensater performed after auch exercive In this connection, remember al-{_ 08 the 34 of December, in 1814 iidstet6 euame Uae ee Uneh | Hlinoix was admitted into the Union ina cutacaa lunge] 18 1815, on the 34 of December 2 agg 5 }John Carroll, the firet Catholic bist - op in the Untted States, died at the | ANSWERED - age of 86. He was born in Mary-| = #08 " . land and educated i France where | ec anna ie F he became a Jewuit | at «hould a child of 8 yearn f Jeat daily? How long should the same| OP the 34 of December, in 1 «| “nila sleep? George B, McClellan was born | Philadelphia | A. A growing child of 8 years He wns will ordinarily eat a# much as hie| fom Weat nd served daddy. And if the family diet in| thruout the Mexican War. He re simple and weil planned he will eat | *Khed hit commission after he he almost the same things, with the ex-|C’me a captain, but when the Civit| ception of raw vegetables, pickles,| War broke out, in 1861, he volun 1 foods, rich desserts and tea or | teered and was commissioned major for which milk should be sub- | Keneral of the Ohio volunteers, six stitute For breakfast a child of & the later he was giver mmand | should eat a al, some kind of }Of all the northern armie fruit, bread and butter and a glawe| After hie defeat by General Lee, Let's go buy Boll's French pas: try, Uptown, 1411 3d ave; down- | town, 913 24 ‘ave. in the Peninsular campaign, General MeCleflan was removed from | mand, After the war he was elected governor of New Jersey. His popu larity among the soldiers way great | and it ie said he was the victim of political jealousies, com What Thousands Have Found Gives Relief from This Painful Trouble constitut disease, g itwelf in aches and pains, inflamed joints and suf muacies. It can not be cured by local or external applications, It } must hav itutional t Take a | purifying | Sarrapariiia, w © ts fran Jeondition of the blood on which | \rheurmatiam depends, and gives per- | manent relief, This mad bines, with excellent alt tontes, what is be the most ¢ treatment of this dinea: If @ cathartic or laxative in needed ‘take Hood's Pills. Purely vegetable. Kh ah ARIA TANS TENN A lentng © general # WE'LL SAY SO tine At the golf etch ied Out to be of some Use th} the world, It makes a hot fire Queer the mayor's seeretar couldn't tell the chie young woman with the $2,000,000 orba where to buy a quart when everybody elne knows where to get | The prince of W departing much to our regret, th Jus who wrote his specchen | f without public f the @ for him name The prince performed hia little po litical Job mont successfully, but he'n lucky he wasn't running for office in the United States, No man wh right mitt gives out from ha ing has much chance of be ing elected to any office in this countr New York managers have decided to try to give dramatic performances on Sundays, Pretty soon the only things closed in that burg on Sunday will be KASURE FIRST To the Voters of Highland Count Wr Tt would be nm lecidedly #o—te vcd pleasure f the eireult court of your county for another term, T ean do that tight well—nothing else I know of that 1 ou will elect ean do; #0 if me peain I will put my best foot foremost and will be ° Very much oblige W. H. MATHENY Monterey (Va) Recorder eee } Burleson says the government is making too thuch money carrying letters that bear tcent stampa. It wouldn't be a bad idea to divide a tthe of the profit with the man whe haw to deliver the letter Constanti © reports that there are now three women to two men in urkey. It wet the women fi ereat un who'u got the sugar? e 8 8 Sugar, sugar Rorton clothing dealers are al-| ready talking about the price of men's sults for next spring. Mont of us in thie neighberhood are still talking about the price of last spring's sult ue ANYWAY, IT WAS BEGINNING TO LOOK LIKE AN EMPTY BOTTLE William @hank wae urday night on a charge of rrested Sat drunk ennene, One empty bottle two thirds full of a liq was found in his pocketsChampaign (Il) News. | You hear a lot of talk about a| fight on tobacco by ganizations, But the panies are making the work easier temperance or tobacco com with high prices The price of coal will be reduced about $2.50 in England December 1 The price of coal here will be re luced t July, when we n't need it The soctalixts marie are threat nm the hie Territ Free fellows some price of t dowan't the rible! Why ernment give the poor Rut, o* the man behind the bars remarked, “Ih eathers, but I'm 8 Jail bird and England received » of Spain with great They can afford to be Both countries know will come there to bor A iaem enthustagtic that nobody row money = COFFEE EXPENSE Buy the Famous MIB- IN THE FIVE POUND CAN AND SAVE MONEY Hts the Best Colle You Gan Buy M. J. BRANDENSTEIN & COMPANY OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE 313 OCCIDENTAL AVENUE SEATTLE - witnessed the play called acted, By that I mean that every actor was a real human being, and not a stage going thru the usual performance that one expects from certain characters. The play proceeded upon the a Charles Stewart Parnell when people thought he died, but ran away and hid in an out of the way place in Ire- It was the body of a Russian peasant | that occupied his coffin which was followed by the weeping multitudes on the occasion that land. ot his funeral. Parnell himself, according to the story, | found a friend and follower who took care of him, Instead of dying and passing into Heaven, he simply quit Ireland. He spent his time long and stormy career. At last he is discovered. him. That is to say, cluding part of BY THE REV. CHARLES STELZLE! wy we see thru a glans, dark! Have you ever looked at trees and hounes and people and things thru} bits of colored glass? Do you remember how ery mo notonous everything appeared-—and how sometimes your brain throbbed, expecially when | you looked thru a red glans? And then you were glad that things weren't really that awful but green and blue and all t made the seen your eyes erimeon life if harmonious Ive when we look at it thru the cot ored glasses of prejudice and hate and bigotry tyat it becomes hideous That's the time men can't u stand how oth oan we iful God-given green when they #e or dismal red Talk to them about the joy of life! and they'll remind you that this ie! just “a vale of tears Toll them that th better, and they war and the at cent race riots a few centuries Uved In staver rid ie getting 4 you of the strike and the re wetting that oni ago half the world J life was counted to “cheap nen were killed for port Speak to them about the deve mt of Ch n character the th centur the “hypocrite and they’l potnt ow who belongs to the church, overlooking the thousands of Christians who modestly live the ives, true to God and to man those who are fighting battles that would unnerve their critics For they “see thru a glass, dark ly"—these crition And then you've known people who always use a microscope—never anything else-—when they look anything. If by change they at id pick It Goes Farther EVERY CAN GUARANTEED The Solution of the Irish Question (Copyright, The other day I attended the te THE LEADER, by Lennox Robinson, which, to | |my mind, furnishes the best solution of the | Irish Question that I have seen. In the first place, it was a good play. mekin® sheer originality and genius it stands out among a host of mediocre plays that have been produced this season, and it was well did and passed into fishing and roaming the woods and enjoying the quiet | and rest that were grateful to him after his | tepresentatives | of the factions in Irish politics come to see of four or five factions, not of the whole 365 factions, the play each one of th ee : ae ” { Things “Face to Face & telercope, the wrong end which they are searching seems far ther The microscope has its user But you cannot see the stars thru You cannot see the mountain hed and | rivers and the green earth You cannot see even a single tree thro blade of grass. The man who is always looking at the little The heavens declare the glory of | Ged; aud the firmament showeth His Day unto day uttereth speech and 5 | Announcing the Prize Winners On the Issue of Americanism There Can BY DR. FRANK CRANE 1919, by Frank Crane) tre and | factions appeals to him for support, LOST | tells the proponent of each party wherein he is wrong. He announces that Ireland cannot be saved by a Party. The only wa it can be saved is thru a spiritual regener: tion, and that will Jead them to thi4 desired goal. In the last scene he announces that soon as some men arrive who can positivel identify him he will tell what his plan is this plan, that is to settle the whole Tris Question and solve the problem that h 4 been vexing a great people for many yeai Meanwhile the little group of represen’ i tives get into a general free-for-all fight One of them, who is a half-wit, in attempt ing to strike down his opponent, strikes Parnell instead, and kills him. So we never find out what the wonderful solution is, and the only man that knows: | it is killed by a crazy fool. The lesson of all this is that social probe lems are not problems at all. There is Irish Problem, there is no Labor Problem—® that is to say, these are not puzzles to which | some clever man may possibly find a solu tion which all will accept. 3 They are conditions which must be livell thru, and not problems to be solved. m and evolution alone can bring such cau | to a satisfactory conclusion, for the simp reason that it is not the truth alone that jj necessary, but it is quite as necessary fo | the minds of the people to grow up to th point where they can understand and u ‘ the truth. In manikin, fumption not die In the con- night unto night showeth ka There is no speech nor r where their voice is not heard Their line is gone out all earth and their words to end the world. In them hath he set tabernacle for the sun. Which is as a bridegroom o out of his chamber, and rejoiceth a strong man to run @ race. You can't be small when thie 1 you. It will put new life and ff hope into you And here's the closing verse in) this wonderful pealm Let the words of my mouth, the meditation of my heart, be ceptable in Thy sight, 0 Lord, y redeemer, ASK FOR and GET Horlick’ | ‘The Original Malited Milk | Foy infants ond Juvelide ak into it from that that for they look “0 away than ever, and the microseo: just y not even a rt of it things in n ot life-—the petty Tr’ lives—soon becomes all '* & good thing, once in a while get a big, broad sweep life— of life > get a glimpse of God. ) *you—read this passage 19th Palm the opinion of three newspaper representatives of the Post-In- Times amd Star ote the best gencer oe pectively bing SHIP by TRUCK The New Ace Candy Bar ng is list of those ceeeee FURST PRIZE $25.00 SECOND PRIZE. .$15.00 THIRD PRIZE. ... $10.00 1A GRIND Nort a (Mins) € aN 1126 Forest St. Bellingham, Wash, MABELLE D. SMALL fi isis Box 167, Bremerton, Wash. Mra, Wa. J. Miller, 1403 B. Mins Ingrid B8th Bt., City soe $2.00 Fourth Ave Mra, D. Durkee, 45th and Sunnyside, Apt. & City.. Rilly Woods, Relievue, Wash Kay & Crone, 6020 22th Ave Navy ¥ N. Be, : &. Bremert Mins Netlie Gook, Bellevue, ee 3.00 MMR. scison'ss 45 caster, Box WON. Furman, 941 No Pith Wash Bt, City... Teresa M. Cohn, Doanbrooke Motel, Cleveland, Ohio 206 Bearse, S¥ W., OF Miss Florence Vhoun, 1462 N, y 1.00 untington, 901 y 1.90 Margaret Cheal, 918 17th j Mey ONY os esesee 1.00 { Madeline Hayden, 6318 La: ; Caroling M.’ Bast, 4035 Firat wer) Ave. N. BL, City 1.00 Anderson, S021 16th | Mine Laverne Litt B., City -. 1.00 Vitth Ave, N Mrs, Chappell, L449 W, 6th Dorothy M city sees 1.00 Ave. Nu Clty esas ++ 1.00 Keasior Rudolph, $416 . H. 8 Lancaster, Auburn, Chetry St, City | Friveelto Rutler, Tin Ward ML} Wo wish to thank everybody who par w contest and utions, We must rest on yeu will all find « prine every the now delicious whipped he prize winning and other tisements from time to time, ize Winners in a fow days, assure you It hax been a ploasure thought them all good the decision of the judg time you bay a TELEPHONE ELLIOTT 188 If Your Dealer Can't Supply You With “Ship by Track” Bare ACE PRODUCTS CO. TERN AVENUE ne w SEATTLE