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_ Get Him to Church NORWALK, ©. Jan, 29, — Hogs & part in the Sunday school ip contest being waged be- the ) hodist and rr y churches here About a week the Rev, A. J, Funnell of the terian = chureh asked Harry Pressing, « Norwalk township , to attend Sunday sehool, #1 will,” said Pressing, “it some of You fellows come out here and help “me food my ox” Preading forgot al! about the mat: | until he was awakened early ane morning by the drrival. of t and Edward Gerken and Bennett, all Presbyterian Sdh- gchool workers. ‘The three were for the occasion and served breakfast waiters for 120 hogs 60 head of cattle, So Pressing d Sunday school. muscle in the bady needs a ly of rich, red blood in propor. to the work it does. muscles of the back are under strain and have but little rest. the dlood is thin they lack it and rebel. The result ts tion of pain in those muscles. ities agree that backache without developing a pain in in the back should always the sufferer to look to the con af the blood. It will be found FA most cases that the use of Dr.| Pink Pills to build up the will stop the grumbling of the muscles: of the back much better it is to try Dr, Wit Pink Pills for the blood than way to unreasonable alarm your kidneys. If you suspect kidneys, your physician can tests in 10 minutes that will Your fears at rest or tell you Williams’ Pink Pills are sold ‘all druggists or direct from the f, Williams Medicine Co. Scheneo N. Y., on receipt of price, 60 per bax. Write for the free “Building Up the Blood.” NY THIS PERFECT HAIR ~TWNT FR Brings Trial Package of “Brownatone” ENDURE GRAY Hare Want every woman to know & only how easily she can tint faded, streaked hair herself truly wonderful is the r Produced when Brownatone for this purpose. Thousan ready know and use fect hair tinting prepa: : thousands ha from actual exper ve it restores to ‘gray, and bleached hair its original and glory. n easy to ly hair t 1 gray. faded. or bleached any beautiful shade of brown Absolatety Harmices jens, odorless, easy to appl a , aniline, cow. anything to injure the hair or most tender scalp. Far rior called “restorers” and ‘and recommended by reliable gists everywhere. Two \¢ t to Medium Brown, ik Brown to Black.” and $1 1 Free Trial Offer lle with ¢ kage and helpful © of the hair. Sounds funny—but just try it once fief comes every time and com Pe: hen Indigestion nearly drives erazy—when just the thoughts meal time make you sick—when the eating of @ small amount carefully selected food starts the ins, the sourness, the gas, the iting, the heartburn, then in nm you will be giad to know of ia simple treatment that brings quick relief. you want be rid of Acid ach, Indigestion, Sick Headach. Dizzy Spells, do this today, a it regularly, after each meal every day, until your troubles disap- ear—it won't be many days. Important Instructions Follow ae rd directions carefully Bh you are almont sure to find quick ai To an gréinesy drinking glass r, ink meal—be the water is wa and be sure you use Hisurated Magnesia for t results, Do thin regularly for week and yon will probably for- | all about yous stormach pply ny good druggist Mth Kisurated Magnesia at) [2 o'clock Friday mi sign at 2711 South Main street and | Tanlac, declaring that it is the only ment Than BY DR. J. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Jan to be on the upgrade toward the revolution. | | | be held at Bonney-Watson parlors at ARMY MEDALS for boys and girls lof any school (colleges excepted) are loftered for beat eanays on “Henefits lof Enlistment in the Army.” MARCELLA CRAFT, soprano of the La Scala Opera company, will be the soloist for the seventh Symphony program of the Seattle Symphony or- |chestra to be given at Meany hall | Friday evening. | “HELP SEATTLE GROW” ts |the slogan of census workers at the Chamber of Commerce checking up folks missed by enumerators, Phone Main 5060. JOBS FOR EXSOLDIERS are | plentiful in Alaska, according to Ma jor W. H. Waugh, U. 8. A., stopping at the Frye hotel ZONES FOR PARKING “for hire” cars cannot legally be established by the board of public works, Corpora tion Counsel Meier rules. PAWNING A SUT’ for Clark Upeher, a negro. He held for police inveatigntion. WAS AFRAID TO CROSS ST was unlucky is “Dadé4y Smith's Home Garden | Market. Fresh Vegetables and Plants of All Kinds for Sale Here.” Nearly everybody in Los Angeles will remember having read the above hundreds of people are personality acquainted with J. F. (“Daddy”)! Smith, over whose place of business the sign appears. | “Daddy” Smith is not only thor- oughly posted on business affairs, but is also well up on matters of general interest. He talks especially | interestingly on the subjeqt of medi cines, having, as he says, tried every- thing during the past thirty years in his efforts to overcome a chronic case of indigestion. In relating his experienc few days ago, “Daddy” | Smith had @ great deal to may about medicine he has ever found that did him much good. Here is his state ment “For at least thirty years I have suffered the worst kind from indi- gestion. After eating I would bloat | up as tight as a drum and feel just misesable for hours. During the past three years, especially, I have! just suffered agony, and no matter | what I ate, if only a plece of bread, |the results were the same. I often [had to get up three or four times at | night and take soda, or something, | trying to get relief from my stomach | misery s0 I could get a little sleep jand rest. I had no appetite and with only two or three hours’ sleep a {night, and eating but little, I get |s0 nervous and weak that I could hardly keep going. “For some time before I took Tan lac I would not attempt to cross the | street alone for I was so weak I was | afraid of falling. I was dizzy all the | time and would tremble all over just like a leaf. Well, I was completely down and out—not worth a nickel so far as any kind of work was con- cerned—and that's the whole thing in a nut shell. I have read and stud fed a great deal and believe I have | tried every medicine I ever heard of| | and I will say right here that I have never found the equal of Tanlac, At |first 1 thought Tanlac was going to |fail me like all the rest had, ax the first bottle seemed to do mo little | good, if any. But [ believe in giving @ thing a fair trial, so I stuck to it and while on my fifth bottle my stomach began to feel like a new one. | Well, wir, today I am in better con dition than I have been in for many years and I am still gaining both in| | weight and strength right along. 1 work every day without tiring eas! eat just anything I want, and sleep| © night. For a long; time en bothered with my | kidneys, but since taking Tanlac they | are better, and my whole #ystem ha |been built up in such good shape }that I am glad to recommend the medicine that did the work, I want] to may to anyone suffering from) stomach trouble and a run-down con-| | dition, take Tanlac by al! means, for my experience is that there's nothing | like it.’ ‘Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell | Drug Stores under the personal di | | rection of a special Tanlac represen tative —Advertisement, 'Peons Better Off Under Self-Govern- That’s what I discovered almost as soon as I entered Mex- ico shortly before Christmas, to find out for The Star what ithe actual conditions in that country are today. 1 began my mission anti-Carranza and pro-intervention, I had lived and practiced my profession among all classes in Mexico for seven years prior to 1913. the dictatorship of Diaz was the best form of government for Mexicans. I thought all the stories of the failure of the revo- ‘everywhere | maull jin » normal » Pao ny <n tae setae alec ata’ THE SEATTLE STAR--THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1920. Revolution . 29.—Mexico today appears self-government, the goal of 1 thought I knew that lution under Carranza were true. I believed it was the vene and show the Mexic against his will how Mexico should be governed. I have returned from my mission pro-Carranza and anti-intervention. And why? Simply because there are signs| that the Mexican t» selfgovernment; that democracy is putting an end of slavery in the form of that the people are tired and military rulers; and that Car / ranta in making what to me was amazing progress in the matter of} getting the country on «4 baste CONDITIONS BETTER « THAN IN EUROPE | Conditions are by no means ideal in Mexico, But they are far mu: perior to conditions as reported in most European countries and tn-! finitely better than I had heen ied by protntervention friends to be-! lieve they were, ‘There in need for | great improvement and it is being shown steadily. For this I have what I maw and the word of rich and poor alike. j Tt has long been charged tn this country, and by me believed, that the peon of Mexico aa I knew him for seven years wan not capeble of self government. | In Sah Luis Potosl, the capital of the staté of the same name, 1 ran across a significant incident. | The manager of a mine tame to Governor Martinez and sought that official’s ald in stopping an exodus of workmen, These miners were peona. ‘They represented the low. eat class of labor tn Mexico. WON'T LET MANAGER INTERFERE WITH MEN The mine manager sald that bia men were quitting because they had they could get better wages tn another district, The governor promptly informed the mine manager that he had no au- thority to interfere with the men, that the day of forcing the peon to remain with his employer was past, that if he wished to keep hin| men he had better paste posters about his camp showing the ad- vantages of remaining tn his em- ploy and, if necessary, increase their wages to the amount offered in the district to which they were) going. So these peons, who, under Diaz, would have been so tndebted to their employer that they could not have left for a more lucrative place the taking to ot war|™Y unless the new employer would pay off their obligations, went ahead. The revolution had taught them to exercise their right “to| work for whom they pleased.” NOT FORCED TO TRADE AT COMPANY STORES Under Diaz the peons were forced to trade at company stores and a} part of titeir pay was in the form of company checks, good only at the company stores, This practice no longer is legal and Carranza is enforcing the law which requires | payment of wages all In coin of the republic. Score another tally | for self-government. | Operation of the rallroads and telegraph system by the govern: | ment clearly refutes the belief in| “the states that the Mexican ts incapable of nelf.government. My trip from the border Mexico City and return was made more nearty on schedule time than | many trips of similar length in this country that I have taken or | heard about. And the difficulties | of rundown and inadequate motive | power and rolling stock on the| Mexican roads make the task more | difficult. The railroad administra. | tor of Mexico has to combat the bandits, too. That's one handicap that our railroads haven't had to meet to any extent aince the days of the old West, HEAD OF TELEGRAPHS IS “SELF-MADE MAN” The head of the telegraph system is a young man Whd has worked his way in truly American “self. made” fashion from the office boy stage to the top. He haa under him 12,000 employes and he can give you most of their names as well as the names of stations off. hand ‘There are many examples of nc tions by governors of states which show the success and the fairness | to of the civil administration in the | progress that is being made in| j establishing states’ rights. | Governor Martinez, of San Tals Potosi, reduced taxes levied by a| former administration 60 per cent | and thug made it possible for citi. | zens to pay their taxes and get al fresh start Former Governor Osuna, of 4, @ graduate of a college Tennessee, used state money to buy trucks to speed up movement of crops In hie state when the rail | facilities proved inudequate. He later turned over these trucks to the farmers when they had paid for themacives, MEXICO PATT NG AFTER THIS NATION Governor Mirales, of Coahuila, has firmly established free s¢ hools, school to provide teach CO GAINING GOA REPUBLIC IS TURNING TO CIVIL GOVERNMENT Business Men Start Boom for Pershing! NEW YORK, Jan Woods, wealthy jman, is in New York to launch the duty of this nation to inter-| Pershing-forpresident in| two b ern, state ald for those willing to become teachers and state aid for farmers. Seven Dias and mind “show me’ I was shown that the Mexican t*| taken making strides toward pelfeovernment | heat part about it in that he's pat | terning after thin nation. thers, Mark W National | Frank H. ure soon to join him here years Madero made me think the Me capable of self-overnment c (trip thru Mexico after a seven-year peonage;|*beence has caused me to change Minssourt rapid ——————EE_ ne afer Cnt ight after Christmas, I sat door on & crowded local y paper an 8 bit cold—not even eh when I got off dt my atat to mneete, By the tin | home my even were red, ST t George business 2 Nebraska ” a cold. influensa and there had beet preumoule was worried. boom. Tin ‘ . ay nan Ot luce ein. Gomecan” Ge pee Pershing club, and ‘ime to get after A directions the follow Ge feet Mexico under wi nistration, >) an waen't)| But a in of these Mitte wonder hou: wy Ste fe eae conted, ake, no calomel—merety a mild laxative. It they "t help back with # attitude and went ne and permanent | Your money, back nock s cold is nothing ‘The | suizecte! T. ma every goed Bur be'sure wo get ‘ooks’.” American Legion Posts Score Solicitation of Funds byPrivateLegion to Break Up That Cold” from the office one too close train, 1 nd didn't 11 nd she replied: | Can Legion of Beattie to solicit funds ly abso! , & bew man in the meraiag there wasn ¢ & vestige of that | workers in the | re chocolate and further advise the to ‘aed the you get any solicitation of this character be only a quarter a box formation of such action should store sella ne m fe he jou { | The following resolutions were! “Whereas, There appear to be Ie the four posts of the! some citizens of Beattie who are un | American Legion in Seattle ity | der the impression that the Private | OY | Whereas, Members of Seattle Soldiers’ 4 Salt . “Ss | post, No. 18, American Legion, have . and Sailors’ Legion, the or teen aps 4 by citizens of Seat-|#4Nlzation circulating said letters, is tle in regard to a letter inclosing | affiliated with the A lean Legion ticketa at $1 each, purporting to be | and, | for a dance to be held the Masonte | ae ? ‘ temple, February 6 and. Whereas, It is known to 8 te : —~| post, No. 14, Amertean Legion, that | «4 M T | the graduation exere: “tin Let Me Tell You How |‘ «steven exercises of tho wit son Business college will be held at |"? the Masdnle temple on February 6 at the same hour that the maid dance is advertined to be held; and. Whereas, Said letter states that Hot the Private Soldiers’ and Ballors’ Le it \ gion is incorporated under an act of cong ; and, eas, The American Legion in the only organization of ex-service so many | men that has ever been incorporated t Il by an act of congress; and, “Whereas, It ix against the policy jof the various ports of the Ameri my be yt nd i felt ach: i over, it Tooked as fy i were in fore peach 0 of any kind from the public; now, therefore, be it es “Resolved, By Beattie post, No. 18 it. from | American Legion, that we condemn box of | the act or actions of any organiza j ton that seeks to obtain funds from the public under the guise that it is | afritiated with the American Legion; and, be tt further “Resolved, That we ask the press ity to publish this resolution, public that it 4 cavtabin| i Againat the policy of the American | you when| Legion to solicit funds, and, should a old In| tart in) Ce wey iP7| made ostensibly from the legion, in be them. | given at once to any one of the four posts of the American Legion of this OF LIBERTY Jap Pays Board to friends, hours until three doses are taken quickest usually breaks up @ cold and ends al! costs only a few cents at drug stores, krippe minery. nostrils and air passages of head;| Says Star’s Investigator | P " Crippled Officers Taught to Dance | LONDON, Jan, 29.—Daneing ts be ing taught British army officers who have le or & leg in the ion being part of “i to g the men poise fidence in using thelr arth mbes. Preliminary work alon ine begins at the hospital an iter the officers may continue their cosons without cost if they desire Remain in Prison LO’ ANGELES nics da in pa in the Jar o. wn arm unty jail after acquitted of Japanese. He vengeance of the dead mar and will not leav Jail until made » to get t of the elty being urdering ® fellow thi war truc has arrange $1,000,000 Dyke Stops Georgia Flood » 21 AUGUSTA, Ga., Jan. 29.—The $1 Phone Main | 000,000 on the banks of the Savannah river at Augusta proved its worth recently when the slowly rising river reached its crest of ap. | proximately 36 feet—two feet below ', No. 40,| the height of the river during the Adju-! 1908 freshlet. The weather bureau reported no rain in the watersheds, Break a Cold In Few Hours First dose of ‘‘Pape’s Cold Compound”? relieves all stuffiness and distress—No quinine! Costs little! for Investigation EKATTLE: PORT, No. 18, Third Ave 1616% Phone 6420 AINIER POST. 1616% Third A Main ve levee J. NOBLE re, and Hillote 479 AOYD COCHRANE “Ballard tant, 1 POST, Sailors 19 W, 62 sto Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blow nose running; relieves and enuffiing! A dose of “Pape's | #* duliness, feverishness, sneem od Cor . ling, soreness, stiffness. 4 mepeEne” ee, avery Pape’s Cold Compound” is the surest relief known and two lit acts without assistance. Tastes clogged-up in. contains no quinine. Insist om The first dose opens even Nore than you need Food VERY now and then you hear of someone going a month without food and being little the worse for it. But let a man try going with- out sleep for even a few nights and see what happens to him! Are you getting the right kind of sleep? Not if your bed is noisy or uncomfortable! The slightest creak or rattle will prevent that complete re- laxation which is the first step towards sound, restful slumber. You should know the Sim- mons Bed — The noiseless bed— The bed built for sleep CYou Thousands of people will tell you that they: never real- ized how deep and sound sleep can be, until they dis- carded wooden beds and ordi- nary metal beds for a Simmons Bed — noiseless, restful, sleep- inviting. Simmons Company are pio- neer makers of Metal Beds built for sleep— Makers of those wonderful Simmons Springs, that really do invite the body to lie out flat, every muscle relaxed — Specialists, too, in Twin Beds — that fine principle of a separate bed for every one, so that ore sleeper does not dis- turb the other, or communi- cate a cold or other ailment. SIMMONS COMPANY ELIZABETH, ATLANTA, KENOSHA, SAN FRANCISCO, MONTREAL (Executive Office: Built for Sleep Kenosha, Wis.) The “Sheraton” No. 1967—in Twin Pair Made of Simmons’ new Square Steel Tubing — Se: less, smooth and beautifully finished. ‘6 ‘eds Exquisitely enameled in the accepted Decorative Colors, Has the Simmons patented pressed steel Noiseless Corner Locks, ally pleasing in Twin fair. Need Sleep Ask the leading dealer in your section about Simmons Steel Beds, Brass Beds, Springs, Day Beds and Children’s Cribs —the most popular sleeping equipment in his store. They cost little if any more than ordinary beds andsprings. And when you are selecting your Simmons Beds with an eye to their appearance in the room, you will sce that Sim- mons has for the first time established beautiful and au- thoritative design in Metal Beds. ° e e Sleep is a big subject! Write us for the brochure, ‘‘What Leading Medical Journals and Health Magazines Say about Separate Beds and Sound Sleep’’, Free of charge, Easy Your choice of rolling casters. ‘win Pair and Double Width, Speci+