Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FRIDAY, OCTORER 22, 1920 WILL ROGERS in “J “Leta Ge to the Liberty” If You Enjoyed “231% i by Mary Roberts Rinehart You Will Love This Newest Comedy Triumph by the SEATTLE S’ CALL ME JIM” Will Amuse His Last Crowds riday Night Always Good Advice Hours’ Leave” Same Gifted Author— TSA GREAT LIFE A swift-moving chapter in the adven- turous life of a hero with an unholy appe- tite for food at all hours, an attachment for young women, a penchant for practical joking and an imagination that stops at AND HOWARD HALSTON nothing! ‘ : his chum, “The Wop, are three of the clever players in this fanei- ful, quaintly humorous, wholly qtertaining, tale of American life. Piano Quality First § Is Our Principle Our prices on strictly high grade instruments would surprise you, taking into consideration their excellent quality. Christmas buying has already begun at the C. C. Bender Co., so if you are thinking of making a selection, DO SO NOW It might also be interesting to know that the pianos we offer you won the the famous ‘Baldwin HIGHEST AWARD . Baldwi EVER GIVEN AN AMERICAN PIANO, the Grand Prix. This being For this reason we sold $15,000 worth of instruments this month. We are conducting A GENUINE SALE with genuine guaranteed reductions. This means actual lowering of prices. Here you get quality, mg beauty, durability above all, receive prod treatment. These all records perfectly c..¢. Phonographs play They are as good ae the best and better than the rest. Read This $100 pianos; When the Bender Co. puts on a sale of pianos and phonographs it means a real sale Now Is Your Chance to Parchase Phonographs 40 Phonographs the reduction $150 new piano-players on new reduction on slightly damaged cases, your choice We have @ number of used pianos, as good as new, in cluding Victor, Weser Bros., Baldwin, Everett, Johnston, Stoddard, others from $150 up. Singer and many Sale Now On—Open Evenings C.C. BENDER CO. j 1609 Third Avenue, Between Pine and Stewart SSSR S RO RR RRR ". The mishaps of himself and assthey roam their favorite haunts, form some of the most ludi- crous moments imaginable! ‘And What Did the Slumberers Say? TOLEDO, Young smelled smoke on his beat barn, full of Young dashed into a near-by house Oct. 22. Patrolman horses, was burning grabbed a sheet off some sleeping oc cupants, wrapped it over the horses’ heads and saved all five. on J. Rh DF Yon Free Examination BEST $2.50 GLasses on Earth We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really grind lenses from start to finish, and we are the only one in SEATTLE—ON WINST AVR. Examination free; by graduate op- tometrist. Glanses not prescribed unless absolutely necessary. bINYON OPTICAL CO. Bon-Opto is the eyes at hom than a million people tet eyes an they for their eeth: to cleanse and preserve them a Home Treat ir druggist and fresh feeling * of vision will rid seem brighter and rk leas tiresome your day's w Note: Physi bye Bpectaliata pre netibe al STAR Second Day of the Great Cox--Harding Debate Reporter Is Reporter Benjamin Wheeler Just for Strong Strong Harding; for Cow as Gentlemen, Go to It: FOR COX KDGAK ©, WHEELER I ND your yeater of the sat on the bi lowy waves enator Harding ate a very resting plece word. pleture aw the inte nd sane” pilot of fletion Just he 1 ean the er Wob tation placed t It y w far ou or of the ¢ ni on the word ship Wibble pre ate ou mean that Senatoe Har ne t of leant re play nh the sense ntance ry course that will fur forever seeking » waters of compr at ifive of prin sand prog » then T can agree following the , 8 FOR THE TING PLAT Hut give me the fighting pilot, who iy not afraid to make his own dect fons for the eraft who 4 sending rifung after reading in ‘The Ahead and who despiser The firet thing I did ur “opening argum@nt © last night Was to turn to frie Noah Webster to fi hat he had to may about the wor It was a cu I found the following quo example Men who © that das an aay he (President Roosevelt) He nt tea fe to pros wih , | schemes to publi Root I detriment hu ouldn’t have found a better sen wate argument is extremely “unsafe” for men to ha boat If they're trying to steal ¢ at n? REMEMBER WHAT HARDING SAID OF ROOSEVELT? let's see What kind of Harding apply to Gov to your and sane" Now wate” characterizes quoting his own we We are oppobed veit) be * to T. an R. (Roone unsafe and leader, because he in law- neere, selfivh and un : because his first admin istration was unsuccessful in main taining the prosperity he inherited because he is a bully by nature and « lover of war, and in, therefore, |to be trusted with control of the army and navy and our relations with our neighbors.”—September 25, 1912 © he us Harding, Theodore Roosevelt waa “unsafe” because he disregarded his own political party to fight for the safety the gree caune he big @ 1 of property rights; be fused to com mise on asues, beckuse he refu his principles to keep the politicians “in line he Was @ fighter for progress, for lever warring againat every “safe and | mane” tradition Uhat robbed men and women of their rightful ponwesnions and their li their laugh | You, T. R. “rocked the boat.” sust jas often as there were people in ft who needed a ducking “ROOSE’ A LEEGONATIONS” | Rookevelt advocated a league of nations with authority and power to enforce its decisions. He ‘recog nimed that the know ge on the part of warinclined nat of the exist enee of suah authority and power would go a long way toward making them keep the peace. To Senator Harding ho was “unsafe.” “Fighting Jimmy” Cox fs for very similar reasona, To detail some of these redsons He advocated America’s entry into | the league of nations, a thing that | ts unprecedented in history and un- | founded on tradition, yet hax been accepted as+a logical atep by three. fourths of the world. It is #0 logical that Harding and his Wilson-haters have been forced to “educate” the public against it by injecting into it | things that never were there, then eprove them. rd in three terms as chief executive of Ohio includes the fol lowing legislation COMPENSATION LAW RECOMMENDED BY A. F. 1. A compulsory workmen's compen sation law, recommended as a model |by the American Federation of Labor convention. Reorganization of the rural school girl the same educatio as the boys and girls in the citie Adoption of a mothers’ pension system. Initiative and referendum in state legisiation State-wide primary elections. A non-partisan judiciary. Home rule for cities, ¢ Minimum wage for women. Establishment of child welfare de. partment And a long list of similar welfare measures | Last, but not least | champion of woman suffrage One of his first official acts as governor was to order a survey of the ach & personal in. vestigation of them which resd)ted jin a new and better school system. With Cox, WOMEN AND CHIL DREN COME FIRST. And that's the kind of @ pilot 1 prefer to ride with. 8. A, WEEK Preacher 60 Years Without Salary LONDON, Eng. Oct For 60 | years a local preacher, without fee | or reward, James Sykes has died at | e of 84. During his work in | behalf of the Wesleyan Methodist | community he covered a distance of 30,000 miles. 8 social he has been a A, WEEK —— |Declare Recluse Was 110 Years Old COLUMBUS, ©., Oct Zelick Friedman, recluse who died here ré cently is declared by those who | were his neighbors, to have been 110 years old —8. A, WEEK On Other Side of Red Stamps— Money RIGA, Latavia, Oct. 22.—Postage stamps now in use here are printed jon the reverse side of Bolshevikt money, When the Bolsheviki- left Riga there remained quantities of | paper money printed on but one side The thrifty Latavians reversed the bills and made stamps, “unsafe” | nd|is frankly | won't be not|¥® Will violate ‘our treaty |pean crooks |“ONLY ISST of human rights against | because | erues, and children of! ow Wilson has filled | jways Leer | publicans passed the ch |STANDS FOR RET! system to give the country boy and| al advantages | j roll FOR HARDING BY RALPH J. BENJAMIN 5 ee & democrat, and the « ¢ wtuff he t ih with enct ampalgr * KC and of nation t There's abou * lemocra n the campaign The le Jimenie n the we of nation: mplished faet promises he Hard 4 stand can't be loc Th the t's kK anywhere league becaune wonderful the « superbly beautifu my an of nations nwert league isn't the ts f this campaign The of n complished fact anc league fons ien’t an will never be as United States of fea STAYS OUT. “HARDING'S STAND WELL KNOWN” Harding's stand in opposed tc lison tried to put c The of we long as the Amer He the thing that w | kopt us And, out of war when J the pledged sor and he knew it, Jimmi any nearer ta joinir than my bourbot as ing Jimmie. Wi into ft. Rush would; the senate not a gathe stam ymined he mie Cox pr gue of nations thing he can't de n't come the league to get us in Jimmie of this nation is fe it tho and My n to the * is based on my should keep European fracas unless some od cause to get in league we'll have to time a flock of 1 Spanish Uruguayan and Jap diplo ckers tell un If to when #0 or opporition league of firm belief hat we ur mitts out of the one gives us If we join the £0 to British Bra. matic don't war French every eo o Hither full respons sending Ameri for titled Euro league will b of paper. war we must accept the bility—whiech means can soldiers to fight the rap BIS: * MORE OF THE SAME?" The nothing but a n¢ only issue in this campaign is wh want some more of the V brand of governmen or whether we want to ret egnetitutional republic wit uncrowned king in the Whit Republicans or democrats what the voters will decide on. The democrats would place Jim- mie Cox in the chair that Wood He'll rattle, oh! how he'll rattle, but that's what they want to do, ‘The republicans want Harding I'm not kneeling before Uarding | and worshiping him as the world’s greatest man, He tent, I ike him because he Is just plain folks. 1} Itke him because he jen't rich. 1 like him because he doesn't go gnill vanting about the country ballyhoo- ether we 1 admire Harding | he promises nothing trat| he can’t deliver | 1 believe the rey the party of pro, true. republican crooks ways in the minority. Remember. it was republican votes in that made possible the fe serve act and the score of other good laws for which Wilson tock all the eredit four years ago. Re 1d labor law nd @ southern democrat declared tt: blican party is | Unconstitutional “DEMOCRATIC PARTY SESSION”, I am not a democrat because 1 believe the democratic party stands for retrogression, for a presi dent to@ much like a king, for ex travagance, for government ot id for the south, No unprejudiced man—if there is any such a man can read the records of the two par ties and come to any other conclu-| sion. | If you go to the polis November 2} and vote for Cox you vote to con tinue the, Wilson administration. If you vote for Harding, you vote for deflating the government pay-| for greater efficiency in gov- ernment, for a government such as the constitution of the United by. | States provides. I am for Harding because I be eve in a republic that is not ruled by an autocrat and a gang of high handed appointees. I am for the republican party be | cause it promises to reinstate a re-| public in this coungry 8. A. WEEK — Seldom Seen Is TOLEDO, Oct George Miller took six blankets to the Seldom Seen Laundry 1. Now he thinks he misunderstood and that they hav aned him instead. The laundry is closed and the man sement, according to neighbors, seldom seen recently 8. A, WE to be cleane | Motorcars Replace {§ Rickshas in Japan YOKOHAMA, Oct. 22.—The rick sha soon will be a thing of the past here. Two thousand rickshamen have lost their source of live with the placeing into service here of several hundred baby motor cara carrying two possengers each. 8. A, WEEK |Musician’s Ears Too | Large; Lands in Jail LOS ANGELES, 0 Thomas, Gilbert, musician, has an ear for cops as well-as an ear for music. He was wanted by the St. Paul police, and his large ears led to his arrest here 15 minutps after his description was received A European florist has found that plants can be forced by immersing! their yes and branches in hot water while the earth is kept dry. | ed up the other day ling for voter and yodeling charges | Seriously wounded, Cops rewrote the [he can’t prove | becaure Very Appropriate & is |X lihood & Satisfactory Terms Always m™E(]ROTE-RANKINCO. OTTO fF KEGEL, Prosidert VICTOR RED SEAL RECORDS TO ENJOY IN YOUR HOME 87070—For You Alone 89001—Forza del Destino. Caruso in Quest’ Ora Caruso and Scotti 89060—Trovatore—Ai Nostri Monti Caruso and Schumann-Heink 88620—Old Folks at Home Schumann-Heink 74639—Villanelle Galli-Curei 74628—Prelude in G Minor (Op. Solenne 99 23, No. 5) Piano Rachmaninoff 74612—Call Me Thine Own 74041—The Holy City 74339—Ave Maria 74626—Valse (Tschaikowsky, Op. 48) 64405—Somewhere a Voice Is Calling Mabel Garrison De Gogorza Elman Heifetz McCormack With a_VICTROLA and VICTOR RECORDS in your home, the means of producing the best music by the best artists is always at hand. Come in when convenient and we will gladly assist you in making your selection. Ad for Wife Brings . $1,000,000 Trouble: SAN DIEGO, Oct. 22—A $1.35 ade vertidement fn the London Thhes tor” a wife brought him a million dollars” worth of trouble, says Capt. John Ay Tregellis, British war hero, o fendant here in a suit by his wife? against his secretary for $100,000 for alienation of her husband's love. Don’t Pass Up These Overcoat Values Because of de¢lining prices in raw materials a well known m@@ufacturer took a big loss on these coats. All the benefits of this advantageous purchase will be given to Gately customers tomorrow. All-Wool Hand-Tailored Silk-Lined Overcoats You Have to Die to Beat the _Cops SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 22.—When cops heré heard that William Earp was dead on the field of battle they officially forgot his record of six arrests for alleged burglary. They wiped the books cl&in. Earp show- Not dead, only record. A Few Weeks Ago We Would Have Had to Sell Such Coats for $75 and $80 Get your overcoat now— we may not be able to offer such values later in the season. The garments are guaran- teed as to quality and workmanship, $35&550 styles and patterns in single and double-breasted Feature Values in All-Wool Suits The very newest models. The saving offered on these suits will average 40 per cent when compared with prices of only a few weeks ago. Open a Charge Account Credit is a convenience and practical service embodied in mod: ern twherchandising and will often help to simplify the problem of expenditure, You need not pay all in 30 days. Strictly one price, cash or charge, 1113 Third Ave. Between Seneca and Spring Streets