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HEIFETZ Makes Records Only for the VICTOR here remarkable young violinist ae at the Metropolitan Theatre esday evening, January aA Hear him if you can, and g some of his wonderful VICTOR RECORDS, so that he will play for you in your own home any time on the Victrola. The Reliant is the Piano Used | at malt the Heifetz Concerts Sherman Dray: Go. Third Avenue at Pine Seattle Tacoma Spokane Portland LAPSED WAR RISK insurance in the sum of $52,000 was reinstated | by the Ex-Service Men's club at the | University of Washington last week | modeat jeat |and policies totaling $35,000 were! | converted to standard forms. ome YESTERDAY AT FRED JACKSON'S FAMOUS COMEDY vee “A FULL STASI HOUSE” AT THE WILKES “OF COURSE” TT Ger THE BANK BOOK i) FIRST THEN YOU CAN. 7 sAFFORDITANDITS UPKEEP This picture tells a story. You know a lot of people who, instead of put- . ting money in the bank, have been putting it into gasoline and tires. And what have they? Continual grief! Arrange today to deposit a portion of your ™. income periodically in this bank and let your ; money work for you. } You may start an account with $1.00. For 30 years this bank has enjoyed the in- creasing confidence of the people because of our conservative methods. senna P VASHINGTON BAK 810 Second Ave. Established 30 Years. = cidents, such as sprains, bruises, Assets $11,500,000.00. cuts, burns, bites and stings. Just 1 as reliable, too, for earache, tooth TRUSTEES . ache, croup and colic Get it from druggists for 30 cents: G. Ames Henry R. King C. KB, Vilas If not satisfied return the bottle and Jobn T. Condon William A. Peters F. W. West Ag your money mare : ou . B. Finies iver constipated or have sie alld te domes. Cinanen David: Wiese headache? Just try Wizard Liver . razier ¥. K. Struve KBugene B, Favre, Spokane) whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30 Ivar Janson William Thaanum L. O, Janeck, No. Yakima’ cents, Guaranteed, |RIG YANKEE | the training expens Jand furnish adequate quarters dor EPILEPSY |) Was haunted by the echoes of his chance remark. cbs A Sem Onler's would have been overwhelmed | | goune-—to do this you must watch your f No need to let that it. Stop the Quickly Eased by Penetrating Ham: | | tor ltrates quickly, drives out soreness, | jand limbers up stiff, aching joints jand muscles | * in cases of sudden mishaps or ac THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1920, Big Appeal Is Made to All U.S. Athletes for Olympiad Ry HENRY L. FARRELL, (United Proas Staff Corres ie NEW YORK, Jan bit Appeal for a fund of $160,000 to finance lAmerica's fight for the world ath letlc crown in the Olympic games! this summer has been sounded by |Guetavus T. Kirby, president of the |Amertean Olympic committes. A call waa also issued to all ath letes in every line of sport to make Ja sincere effort to win a place on | jthe team and » the United [States combat a combination of | powers on the other side More than the figure set by Kirby may be needed to pay the expenses of the tearm that will croms the water to Relgtum in the ffort to maintain | Uncle Sam in undisputed supremacy of the athletic world. TEAM From 150 to 200 athletes will make up the Yankee team and, according to the estimate of FW. Rublen, sec retary of the A. A. U., it will cost | $1,000 a man. Transportation alone Will cost $500 per man, and it will require an additional sum to defray of the team ing the contests. Disapproving a drive that might prove a burden, the Olympic commit fans to go down in their pockets and SADDEST JOKE OF ALL PASSES Elderly Men With Young Ideas Could Never See |, the Point Anyway | | Bpecta, to The Star by N. BA | |who knows the bs stroke or crawl, or who can do plain feontribute to the fund. To compete for fun may be fun,” President Kirby said, “but to com pete for winning ts not only fun but an accomplishment. When the win ning {# bringing honor to one’s coun try, the accomplishment becomes a triumph “For America to succeed, she must | have, on always, men and money to the number of 160 or) nd money to the amount of athlete mo: $160,000 or more, all a voluntary con tribution to the furtherance of world knowledge and world peace, thru am atour «p Arr’ ATHLETE He &ppealed to every 7 bey or man who can r jump, n shoot a rifle, gun or pixtol; or faney diving; every fencer, oars man and tennis and golf player to wird up his i for these world contests, benefit of himself and the glory his country To the fans thia appeal was made: “Let every sportsman who loves ‘* sake let every sid see his country triumph, put bis hand in hin pocket sport for sp patriot who w and donate generously toward the ex | tee has tentatively decided to ask the | penses of America’s participation in these gamer.” WON'T PROBE Y, M. CHARGE , Official Says “Case Doesn't Warrant Investigation SPOKANE, Wash. Jan. 26.-—No investigation will be made by the federal grand jury in session here of fraud charges against the Y. M. With the burial of Sir William | Osler, who has been characterized as the world's foremost physician, was also buried what might have been described as one of the saddest jokes in all history Dr. Onler, the kindly, witty scten- tist, had no notion of the trouble he was starting for himself when, on| | leaving Johns Hopkins hospital, Bal timer, to become regius professor of medicine at Oxford, he sprang his! All he did wns express the whim- sical opinion that the brunt of the world's work was done by men under 40. and that It would be just as well if men over 60 were to be chioro- formed That was in 1905, Dr, Onter wns! then 56, The public, expecially that | portion of it past €0, failed to eatch | the point of hie pleasantry, and for! the rest of his life the great physician He was 70 when he died, and the | closing years of his life were marked | by notable achievementa tn grappling with the medical problema of the war, and in teaching and Insplring the new generation of physicians A leas humorous nature than Dr. by the criticism heaped upon him by | solemn persons who actually believed | that he bad advocated the painless removal of men at the three-score mark What Dr. Oxter’s regretted remark accomplished of good was to call at- tention to the exceptional value of the services rendered by men far out- “KEEP LOOKING YOUNE It's Easy—If You Know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel ver and bowels--there’s no need of having a sallow complexion—dark rings under your bal —a bilious look in your face—dull eyes with no | sparkle. Your doctor will tell sey ind liver. | Dr. , paid gag a well: known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetal le com- | pound mixed with olive oil to acton The liver and pe = which he gave to | his patients for year Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- | stitute for calomel, are gentle in their | action yet always effective. They being | } about that natural buoyancy which a’ should enjoy by toning up the liver and | clearing the systern of impurities. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tabletsare known by their olive color, Oc and 25c. Stop Your Cou hing. an, ana femme tin fend hoarse throat with PISO'S Rheumatic Pains lin’s Wizard Oil A fe and harmless preparation | ve the pains of Rheumatism, | Back and Lumbago | 1 Oil, It pene Sciatica, La is Hamlin'a W You will find almost daily uses for A. in connection with thrift week Demand for an indictment, made by John ©. Lee, of the MoQee I’rinting company, on the national heads of the Y. M. C. A. on charge of ob! ng money under false pro. tense and of using the mails to de fraud, will be ignored Leo charged the Y. M. GC. A. tn money collected during the war to advertise trust and insurance companies United States District Attorney | Garrecht declared Monday that Lee has bi which would warrant an Investiga. | tion Secretary A.D. Brewer, of the ¥ M. ©. A. here, eweepingly denies ail of Lee's charmes. |tving the age mpecified in that nhe- torte after-dinner speech. John Burroughs, the naturalist, ts busy wit® books, birds and beasts at $2. Dr. Charles W. Eliot, dean emer- itus of Harvard, ts $4, and has put in more than two-score years of use fulness since he reached 60. Uncle Joo Cannon is « potent factor in na tional polities at $3. Rev. Dr. Lyman | Abbott, publicist, ts active, altho he has passed his 4th birthday. Cardinal Gibbons ts 55. Wllam Dean Howells, now $% has written haif a dozen of his most famous! books since he was 60 In the war youth did the fighting. but the directing geniuses were most 3 My { them men past 60, Clemenceau was 67; Von Hindenburg, 70; Gen. Foch, 67: President Wilson and Gen. Petain, 62 Much of the world’s responsibilittes rests on old men. Judges, lawyers bankers, teachers, preachers, writers and doctors are often at the climax of their careers as they near three- score and ten In humbler watks, extreme age te more often an axset than no Look, for example, at William Ed ward Critchlow, who, at 90. travels up and down the land selling, and] incidentally demonstrating, hickory piper Diet for Health Some of my friends have asked me to stop over long enough to form a ciass in Food Science and Right Living. A few more can be modated, and thore wilo value the health of them and dear ones are requested to phone Main 3153 for appointment 10 to 12 a. m., 7 to 9 p. m, at New Richmond Hotel ». LAWSON, F. §. D, Experience as Teacher and Dietitian METROPOLITAN Coming Wednesday For Three Days Only Oliver Morosco PRESENTS Leo Carrillo IN THE FAMOUS FUN AND FASHION HIT “Lombardi, Ltd.” WITH Grace Valentine And the Original New York Company Special Matinees THURSDAY and FRIDAY Rest Seats $1.00 Seats Now Selling Nights: 500 to $2.00 Matinees (Best Seats); $1.00 Plus War Tax aoa! y swimmer | katroke, breast t forward no charges | | non for continuing the burder of the | week's attraction at the Wilk Plebeian as Lincoln anaes | f “WHO'LL BE PRESIDENT? —NO, 8 | ») eee oes Wants Practicality ALFRED FE. SMITH BY H. P. BURTON ALBANY, N. ¥, Jan 26¢—~It has/ didate will have to promise them a been a long time since an Horatio! Quick, sure return to pre-war condi Alger bas bad a current inepiration| “Ons now the war is over and he'll t of those racy, American|h&ve to be able to show them he Canal Boy to President”| kMows how to effect it |#tories, for strictly modern instances! syRERUGS are thought to have ot “tatters” reaching the White| sarted the flames which nearly House have been strikingly Iacking.| Gestroyed the house at 1611, E But if Alfred BE. Smith, chief exec-| aiger st. Saturday night. Mr. and utive of the state of New York, and| Mrs. F familiarly known as “Governor Al,” should, by trick of fate or politics, ment extinguished the fire. A pile! arrive there tn 1921, all the old Lin-| of papers under the stairs had been coln-Garfield brand of romance may | set on fire. immediately be revived. srereeundieaain tase HE'S BORN OF | POOR PARENTS fut “Al” Smith, altho modern as George Ade, is ax plebelan as Abe Lincoln. Altho of rich New York,| he was born as poor as the rail-| splitters son, and his father’s Bow} ery tenement bad no more graces mae than the little Lincoln cabin Alfred Smith's birthplace was in| MOORE the center of the famous Fourth} 0 winsome blonde, two young! ward, a fascinating area that holds) *% & dozen shimmie shakers and not only the Bowery but Cherry|*" ¢%tra portion of elaborate cos- Hill and Mulberry Bend, Baxter et. and Chinatown in ite embrace. He was about 3 years old when they started calling him Al. When he was 6 bin father died and his mother, a widow with two children and no money, opened a candy store. nent Al to St. James’ parochial sehoo!, and when he was 13 he went to work in an ail store, quitting four years later to clerk in the Fulton Fish market In the evenings the | real Al appeared—the Al that became |famous in the whole district as the bent monologist in Henry Campbell's Club for Boys Campbell soon decided Al was too good for the fish market and asked the district loader to get him a job, and hé was appointed server of jury notices at $1,000 a year, Then Al mar a Cherry-st. girl, sister of a vollceman ‘They took a four-room |tenement in Peck Slip and the first baby was born there in 1901, when Al we jin the t | vaudevilie patrons at the Moore this| official tithe of the headline gloon chaser, It's like half a dozen head: year, in that it's tuneful and color others. The bill has a complete assortment | of top-notch vaudeville delicacies— and indelicacies. as well as she looks, Some singer Hickey brothers are back aguin, *, and the other han mastered th art of leading him on, They one of her own sketches, This time} its “Keep Smilin.” The audience! likéd her work Sunday. Sam Hearn, “The Rube and Hi | Piddie,” could have stayed before the Smith's district had a fall-out, and at| am jeventh hour th man, Campbell sugges ng acrobatic act needed a ere Al. ‘Thus LEVY'S ORPHEUM he ¢ assembly in 1904, as Ert Hunt and Levy's Musical Com-| jhe mits, “the greenest} eay company ¢ © abundance of | {member that had ever entered Al | praige the endid presentation | bany of “The Truthfu * this week, at | | But’up there a new man was! Leys yheum, From the start to| created by virtue of responsibility | the finish, the vehicle is one of plen placed upon him ty of fun of a good, w ome vari: | | In two or three years Al Smith | ery ard, Ert Hunt, knew more ab the state than any- | Robert and Bob Sand.} one else in the a He Was berg all have strong supporting practical, and had a parts as the partners and business Eleven ye Ft « of Lew White, the leading | atitutional convention, ‘ | and George Wickersham compliment Raymond, Pauline Ar Jed this young opposition democrat /thur, Floy Ward and Lillian Hunt cs his know of, the affairs Of | algo appear to adyantage, York state, | Little Flossy Sturgis, clad in a " practicality today that we | stunning bathing costume, leads the sho, * said Smith, in discussing the | chorus in a pretty bathing offering fasues he thinks will come before the |that won several encores Sunday people in the presidential campaign. jevening. Dorothy Raymond scored ‘Of course the great issue to be set: | dig in the offering, aided by t tled now is the peace treaty if we | mudd, Lorenzo and Gerard, sin are to take our appointed ¢ in/from the theatre boxes, the world. | Frank Budd, Bob Sandberg, | PRACTICALITY | Blanche Hall and Robert Lorenzo all | AN ISSUE have ¢atehy numbers with the girls | “If perchance tt is settled, then Ij} on the runway, that rounds out the think our main issue becames one of | musical end of the bill in a splendid intense practicality—the issue of | manner. how we shall return to normal lfe + oie We have to get down to brass | and cut down the high cost of | ¢ one after another with not merely talk about it. We | surprising rapidity, a chorus girl, a must reduce our enormous taxes. package of love letters, stolen jew “Work is plentiful and people's |els, a pint of Green River, police- prosperity ja shown by the savings|men, servants and a lawyer get all bank deposits, But there is no rea- | tangled up in “A Full Hous this high cost of living longer than abso-| The play is really too full of new wenn an unexpected happenings for the |audience to get much out of it but| e jrole, Jane Morgan was almost. un-| recognizable to her many admirers in| her new role as “Susie Sponge, the |also shone in a new role, that of an| | English butler Addison Pitt, besides directing the production, took an important role as Mr, Pembroke, the owner of the missing jewels, who is willing to compromise in the end so that everything turns out all right, Jane MecDougall-/outhwick Second Avenue at Pike 37 Women’s Winter Coats Again Regrouped $65 Drastic Reductions All of our better Coats again re- duced—a rare opportunity for say- ings! These coats are all fashioned in the modes of the season—some voluminous models for dress wear, and others in tailored effects. —The Materials are silvertip helivie, suede cloth, brondelotts, —The Colors are those suitable for street and dress wear — dark and light shadings. |lutely necessary, ‘The peaple’s can. | The Trimmings are novelty buttons and bandings; some have huge collars of fur. Cutbertson returned home to! find the house ablaze, Fire depart-| UI SENTENCE I$ HELD VALID Portland Woman Must Serve Three Years in Prison WASHINGTON, upreme court today, by declining to review the case, allowed decisions of line acts that have come along this|lower courts to si Equi, 1. W. W. agee|ee tumes and stage effects are concocted | ful tonic served Orpheum | week. "The Little Cottage” ts the! |2n¢ doors that can be closed holding Marie advocate of Portland, ful. But it's better than most of the|Ore., guilty of violating the espion- She must pay a fine of $500 and _ Serve three years in the penitentiary. The supreme court, Hadith Clifford, comedienne, sings |to review the case, all of lower courts to stand, | the rights of laborers under the Ore and they are sure-fire laugh pro-|gon laws to priority claims against moters. One Hickey is a simp deja b ! nkrupt company for which they The suit was brought by James G. | clever acrobatic dancera, too. | Wilsor bankruptey for Una Clayton appears in another| the Western Condensed Milk Co., of , Who refused to pay the labor claims first “My dear,” said a husband, “pray vote just half a minute to repair- coat, which a pointed naii|S¢Ptc cream into your nostrils jock,” said the drowsy . said hubby; “it is rather , It is never too) IN ASS! footlights all afternoon if applause! GOVER: |decided things He's a first rate] chanced to rend.’ At Al Sniith was governor of | comedian a fir te vioKinist. | the state of New York Max Ford and Hetty Urma dance| mat | By “chance” the district leader, | and wing 1s |who had given Smith hia first real) Jwhikawa brothers, phenomenal] late: job, ar the assemblymen from | equilibrists, close the bill with an} Tat lA “MASS OF WAVY, GLEAMY BEAUTIFUL HAIR | Let “Danderine” Save and Glorify Your Hair In a few moments you can trans. form your plain, , flat hair, You jumbled idea and somo hearty|and full of life, y drug or toilet counter a small bottle nderine” for a few cents. Then soft cloth with the Dander- | aw this through your hair e small strand at a time. yes, immediately, you have auty of your hair, | Every role portrayed is a comedy | of “I maid from Sioux City.” Henry Hall | Instantly doubled the be: will be a mas fluffy and so Be sure you get the Genu excessive ofl ts re-| Z Let Danderine put more life, color, e oe g vigor and brightness in your This stimulating tonic will freshen ie! $500,000 Will Aid Influenza Batél WASHINGTON, Jan. 26—The @ ate today voted to appropriate 000 for the use of the publle service et its te fight | against inf] A new w type of | of aeroplane adopted by the United States game ernment is composed of concrete am steel, and has ventilating ly in case of fire inside or outs Sinnspaschingy is the word by the Navaja Indians of Utah | motor car, and it is Mterally lated t STOP CATARRH! 0 NOSTRILS AND ior ae If your nostrils are clogged your head is stuffed and breathe freely because of a catarrb, just get a small Ely's Cream Balm Apply a little of this let it penetrate through every passage of your head, soothing | healing the inflamed, swotien membrane and you get instant Ah! how good it feels. Your trils are open, your head is clear, more hawking, snuffiing, blowing; more headache, dryness or : «ling for breath. Ely’s Cream is just what sufferers from colds and catarrh need, It's a Dr.H.T. HARVEY (Ex-President Michi Doard Dental Haaminersy cm ti jal Pyorrh: time to specia! bearch work. and is agate BE his offices— BLDG. 604-512 EITED Cor, Second Ave. and Pike Quinine Tablets”. Look for this signature on the box. Darwell, Fanchon Phillips and Ben Erway have im:| portant parts, “COR UNIVERSIT , check dandruff and fall rand help your hair to grow strong and beautiful, erhart, Marvell y