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+ BATURDAY, OCTONER 0, 820, APprOY A guia ol the to Alma Mater during Home | PUblican party ; Week, the latter part of next | Of both farmer i | ~ reign Ae eggalegth ermary |) month, they're going to have a high | 20 years of adm — “WORLD REVOLT eee ey ariclintne flac [OW time, The studes are already | Affairs, Clark V. Bavidge iali é i AGAINST SLAVERY” srivilege of flying the Filipino fag, | ne oe wtud are alres ‘ edgueskornstes ; Socialist Candidate ol Pris- Tr peop 1 ° pe he : was defe ad by the Spaniards | bard at work preparing stunts for Ne of public land i 2 evolt agaltst ca “189 ente o ers. ” of the period in an o On Speaks Final Word in | in revoit against capitaliom and wlav-|in 1896 [to entertainment ot he ld ines at tue period in an RRA ert Macfarlane was Friday ap avy's Orpheum th eee mci —— oS knees, standing | pointed chairman ef the Homecom. | Friday 1 1 . Presidential Race eon Eprron’s Nore cle by Bugene ¥ and last of « United Press by the presidential ean { didates. Pollowing artt BY BUGENE V. DERS Socialist Candidate for President ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 30.—This will | nit be my last word In wt reside in other | is Rot for the people—not a han¢ them, but all th then t is certainly a m where that needs ¢ Fection A very small hority of the pe @eat of government in Wall Street @nd it is there that every solitary eral judge iy named who | the Inw to the peo | there that the candidates are @nd the platforms writte for the dominant politica! par: thru which this insignificant mi ty secures New classes in baliroom dancing ormed the first week in Novem- ‘ Het techniqu: brac! To the Bxercises, Port de Bras, Adagio and Allegro. Hh hool Classes at 7:00 TOpD by mature. When you vote for Cox) vote transacti tesy consistent with sound busi- mess Judgment 4% ‘Wut om Savings Arrwente \ F “RUSS TORTURE ed by it the Bere 'hapeere Quavort, We give to prove its superiority. ; A. LUNDBERG Co. " 3161 Third Ave. Seattle Id_ soothe that itching skin The first application of Resinol Oint usually takes the itch and burn! fg oon ‘of eczema and similar skin| ment ions. This gentle, healing oint- ms to get right at the root of the trouble, and is almost sure to re-| ftore skin health in a short time. | Resinol Ointment and Soap a ORIGINAL Malted Milk If the earth and all it contains ts | —————— { Either Harding, the avowed reac and radicals. The large majority of tionary, of Cox, the proven progres. | the voters of thix district are neither | |aive, will be the next President, Do/Tctionary nor radical. You are the| || not een. th ciate that fact./SY°T8ee men and women, the pro- recognized that the fight between the Republican candidate for Con TODD IS MY CHOICE gress and the Third party candidate} | is & contest between reactionaries n Tuesday next registers hi na loontrot of the government and "| Filipino Students 'PR F the people |" Rivery man and every womee’who|” Plead for Freedom jyotes the republican and democratic! «surely you will grant ue what| [ticket on ucmd ’ you nus to revere.” | al of Wall Street and oppowt: |” nat theme, phrased by Aumuntin | © the people. Palacol, one of the speakers for of natic he blawest) Phitippine freedom, on the anniver ted the celebration at Blan Friday night ational capita dents gath ipino high eet ot their k the id, Their time | Ke atl in ow They must now go, and we | Melby slists are organized for that ver » | sue that will confrent you on election g worker ~ da (Paid Advertisement) HUGH TODD Great Mass of Progressive Voters of the First Congressional District ive masses, and when you, the eat majority, the great middie class, vote for Todd he will be for Todd for Congress. It is ltl A is @ Progressive. by record and | Also vote for Soldiers’ Bonus Bill.) PHOTO PLAY A drama of Woman. A riddle to herself; A puzzle to man. With Geraldine Farrar in a tiger woman role. Geraldine Farrar "THE | RIDDLE: WOMAN Edward Jose From the Stage Play Wy Hay of the tsiands, Homecoming Week at U. to) Clark Savidge Defends Its am, Ines Watkina and Esther | ¢ Associated Exhibitors, Inc., Presents ” \\ Directed b ry THE SEATTLE STAR GREET DADS| FARMER FRIEND «:.’ Be Big Affair Record of 20 Years Washington's grads returr In an effort to pr celebration by I t of the Associ maid, Vivian Your Interests Are Ours a And together our inter- ests are bound up in the Welfare and Progress of this Great Northwest We are helping thou- sands of Members of this Strong Savings As- » sociation to save today for the opportunities of tomorrow, and we are ready to help YOU, For nineteen years our Members have never earned less than > %pivivenps Puget Sound Savings & Loan Association Where Pike Street Crosses Third Resources Now Over Four Million Dollars STARTS TODAY CLEMMER MUSIC— Liborius Hauptman, Director. Overture— “The Merry Wives of Windsor” “Barcarole,” from “Tales of Hoffman” COMEDY—WEEKLY NEWS ILLITERATE DIGEST PAGE &S een Mr, and) ‘Th ‘oree | that Jer Islan that he broke Bis burglary again *. Harmon, 20, rewiding ve trom » refortny Furey | M of tt lawyers, town the r than 11|135 miles an hour between Hib w to one man than practice it in Paid Advertisement. Paid for by Republican State Central Committee, —WHICH?— “T am opposed to keeping the “T have favored and will on . b i favor clusion 0 Japanese out of this country.” tinue to favor the ewclus , P f ¥ Japanese from this Coast, and I j —Robert Bridges am opposed to their acquiring roperty this state, EITHER In a speech at Malden, October BY PL PCHASE OR LEASE.” 8, 1920, —Governor Hart. You are going to vote on this question of Japanese immigration next Tuesday. You may not realize it, but you are, Think a.minute! If Robert Bridges should by any chance be elected—if the State of Washington should choose for its governor a man who has come out boldly and insolently for the Japanese—what will be the effect? What will be the conclusion forced on Congress, which has the power to say whether or not the Japanese may come? Decide the question for yourself! It can only be that the State of Washington wants the Ja anese, welcomes an unrestricted deluge of yellow immigration, let the con- sequences be what they may to American labor, American agricul- ture, American business The result of the election in this state might decide the fate of im- migration legislation in Congress. If Congress believes the people of the Pacifie Coast want the Jap- anese to come, it will not dare to keep them out. If it believes the people of the Pacific Coast want them kept out, it will not dare admit them. ? Where Do You Stand? be With Bridges for unrestricted Japanese immigration? Or with Hart for Japanese exclusion? Don’t be misled by explanations that don’t explain, or by evasive silence of those who are supporting the candidacy of Bridges. For this is the truth: It is Bridges or Hart next Tuesday. The third candidate cannot be elected. Governor Hart is on record as opposed to Japanese immigration. Robert Bridges, the landlord and friend of the Japanese, is on rec- ord in favor of Japanese immigration. Where Do You Stand? And the yellow question is not the only issue. Bridges is the I. W. W. candidate. Every I. W. W. vote will be cast for Bridges. e George F. Vanderveer, leading counsel for the I. W. W., is sup- porting Bridges: ‘ * Ralph Pierce, attorney for the I. W. W., and Elmer Smith, of Cen- — fame, are running for office on the same party ticket with Sridges. 4 Bridges is the man that forced the employment of his own son by" the Seattle Port Commission, of which he was a member, as a non- union engineer, with the result that the union men were let out. The Bridges candidacy is the candidacy of the Non- Partisan League that has wrecked North Dakota. North Dakota, where the farmer, the worker, have been bled white in the interests of Townley and his gang. North Dakota, where the small home-owner’s ite is being crushed out under the burden of an unheard-of taxation. The Bridges candidacy is but another attempt of the I. W. W. and the Non-Partisan League to wreck the American system of govern- ment. ,Where Do You Stand? Under Which Flag—The Red? Or the Red, White and Blue, the Flag of Our Fathers, the Flag of the Greatest Nation on the Face of the Earth? The Result of the National Election Is Assured if the Voters Do Their Duty. Senator Harding will be the next president of the United States. Governor Coolidge will be the next vice president. The next Congress will probably be Republican. The state of Washington must not fail to do its duty to the next president, to the nation, and to itself. It must elect the Republican ticket from top to bottom. A failure to do so would be a blow at the welfare of the state, the seriousness of which could not be overestimated. What could a stranger in the United States senate accomplish in compari- son with what Senator Jones has done and will do? Senator Jones, who is recognized as one of the five most influential members of that body; who is the author of the two greatest pieces of constructive legislation passed by the last session, the ‘shipping bill and the water-power bill; who is recognized as expert authority on more subjects than any other member of congress? What could Mr. Duncan accomplish for Seattle in Congress, in comparison with what John F. Miller has done, can do, and will do? What would be the attitude of the federal administration toward a state administration headed by Robert Bridges, who opposes everything for which President Harding will stand, who stands for everything that President Harding will fight? The State of Washington Must Keep in Step With the Nation. Elect the Republican Ticket from Top to Bottom. NATIONAL TICKET For President || For United States Senator Warren G. Harding 1] Wesley L. Jones ‘ ie P | For Representative in Congress, For Vice President || First District Calvin Coolidge John F. Miller STATE TICKET For Governor ) For Attorney General _ Louis F. Hart L. L. Thompson For “William J. Coyle For Commissioner of Public Lands For Secretary of State Clark V. Savidge J. Grant Hinkle For Superintendent of Publi¢ In- For State Treasurer struction * Clifford L. Babcock Josephine Corliss Preston For State Auditor | For State Insurance Commissioner C. W. Clausen H. O. Fishback