The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 7, 1921, Page 2

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Offering our entire stock of homefurnishings at discounts of 10% to 35% —if you have a home to furnish or if you need a single piece of furniture or a suite for a dining reem, bedroom, library, living room or breakfast room, we advise you to buy NOW and HERE, $28.10 regular price $37.50 geiéen oak finish, has large plate giase mir inches; has two small drawers, one larce “The man whe lives te no purpose, ‘There are shout 130 species of ‘ives to a bad purpose. Dats, distributed over nearly every Py quarter of the globe. ‘To Cure a Cold tn One Dey Grove's LAXATIVE BROMO te, The genul rove. 3961 any other country. With Extra PANTS .00 In addition to a reduction in In proportion to population, Swit | ed hero, is mourned in the Kentucky bears! seriand bas more deaf mutes than | mountains. LIGHTNIN’ NOW |He’s ‘Man Behind’ Harding BREAKS RECORD poses G. 0. P. by Phone Performance NEW YORK, Jan, 7—New Yearw day has a new significance along Rroadway—a remarkable record ret lim the theatrical world—the 1,000th performance of a play! | For three years Frank Bacon's |“Lightnin’* hag been drawing capa ‘elty crowda, It's still going strong No sign of « letup, Its gros receipts are approaching the $3,000,000 mark! | No other play ever ran nearty so long. The American record was pet ‘nome years ago by the play “A’Trip | to Chinatown,” which ran 657 conseo- utive performances, In London “Chu | Chin Chow” has been running nearly three years, but It is behind the “Lightnin' ” record, | New Year's day and the 1,000th performance will see a triumph that the veteran Rasen has been waiting yoars to achieva Tacon, a notable actor himself, w ‘Lightnin’ ™ years ago, It is the “David Harum” of the stage, For ten yours he peddied it vp and down Broadway, but po producer would take a chance, Bacon wrote the play fin 30 days, but he cogldn’t sell it in ten yours, Finally John Golden took a chance and staged jt, Instantaneous success came The & RO. align has been hanging out for three yeara, Bacon himself has played in every perform ance except the day he took off to BY C. C. LYON jfollowing Mterally the tip: “Bee colebrate his $0th wedding anniver| COLUMBUS, O, Jan 1—While| paugherty.” sary—by the way, almost & marriage Presidentelect Harding confers at record in theatrical circles. Marton with the country's “best| Deusherty arrives at his Columbus No momber of the original cast has minds,” Harry M. Daugherty, his | 8” effice about 9 a m The ante room ts fairly well filled. He greets ever been changed. clonest personal and political friend runs the republican party by long: | aa longJost brothers @ national com distance telephone from Columbur.|mitteeman, a state chairman, the Many of the “best minds,® Interest: | chairman of @ national organteation 4 primarily in poticien, Md hun-| to secure industrial poace, an Ameri canization expert, and others, dreds of other minds concerned sole | The warm welcome makes It eany fi M. DAYGHERTY TURTLES ARE _ HER BAROMETER Predict Mild Winter for This Year KNOXVILLE, Tenn, Jan. 7—In stead of « cold, glans barometer to tell her what sort of weather sire will have to prepare for, Mra. & D. Mitchell of this city enjoys the com panionship of 20 pet turtles that are | wise enough to tell ber all abe wants | to know, | Bach fall she pats them to steep tn | and, dirt and leaves for the wintar, If they remain cotentedly buried, she pute in a large amount of coal and brings in her flowers from the porch. She knows that Tennennee ts going to experience an “old-fash- joned™ winter. j | ‘This year she burted them as umual. | The next day the little fellows all got out from their beds, telling her, as it were, that she could lew jers on the porch for quite © while longer and that it wouldn't be neces mary to buy a whole lot of coal at | the high prices of today, becaune the winter this year ts going to be quiet jand mild, FATHER DIES OF OVERWORK ‘Tolled to Keep His Children| in School HARLAN, Ky, Jan. % — The | death of Jobn Callahan, an uncrewn y with getting on the payroll, are Have That “Odd Job” About the House Done Now Hundreds of men and women in SEATTLE need the job in order to eat. Help yourself and them at the same time, Anything from an hour’s work up will be gratefully received. Phone Main 2286 and a competent worker will be sent at once. He was unachooled, fust a platn |mountain man, but he died from |overwork—overwork that be might | keep his children in school | When his wife died sho left him |with eight children, eldem being 11 years, and the youngest a babo tn jarma, He took the mother’s place jim the mountain eabin, | Tolling as long as there was Nght jin the fields, be came home at night, cooked the meals for the next day made shoes, patched clothes, nursed and mothered hia little ones, | He waa found dead in th | Brunswick Records NOW ON SALE Fred Whitehouse felt, Read ‘Em @ Al Bernard { J Meautitat races. Grieving for You, 2056 10-inch bbe ‘The Asiatic town of Malwatchi, on the boriers of Russia, ls peo pled by men only. Californtans rvelty Band [Apple Blossom Time.. -Amphion Quartet n/ Old Pal, Why Don't You Knawer Me? one ae toned pecsceues Ernest Hare {Linay sse+e.The Harmonizers One-Horse Town : +e+eThe Harmonizera 2069 e ‘fsust Snap Your Fingers at Cara 10; i Inch . b odemich's Orcheatr Se (Cantio of Dreams.Gene Rodemich'a Orchestra S029 f sine Me to Sleep. . i So | Sweetest Story Eve Trene Williame Irene Williams Some tensed Day, h'| Sometime, Somewhere -Criterion Quartet 0-ine . 10-im Criterion Quartet $1.00 som neh 00 I love You Sunday... Isham J ng-Jing... Isham Jones | 7ise Bula-J} * * = a tee eeeee Rainbo Orchestra MADE TO ORDER fl You Say Good-bye «Irene Audre: oe of My Heart 4 William Reese 10024 10-inch $1.00 neh) Rustle of Spring...-.e---.Leopold Godowsky TOOK. . «2 nena wewces ceaess-Mario Chamice 01 Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 Ve 12-inch $1.60 Part I Mia's Ital Part tt Ha'a Ttal ° n Band ° eee ‘ Ve an Rand = |a vee S | Hanna crowd. ASK $1,000,000 !Man Baked in Oven 12 Years Ago HIGHWAYS FUND Good Roads Conference 0. K.’s Recommendations Approval of the following recom mendations, made to the state legis lature by the state highway com miswioner, was given by good rouds s from all sections of conference Thurrday represent the state, In in the assembly room of the Cham. ber of Commerce. | I--That no new atate road be lestablinhed by the 1921 state legia | lature, 2. That the plans and specifics Hens for any improvement on the state highway system by any] county be firt approved by the state hichway commissioner. 4, That the plans and specifica | }tlons for any brid, or drainage | wtructure on the state highway system be approved by the slau highway comminsioner | 4 That the legiwiature appro | priate $1,000,000 as @ revolving |fund te take care of advance pay ment on federal aid = improve- [ments pending reimbursement from | federal ald funda. to call him “Harry.” | Gibbs, his secretary, has been on the job for an hour. Gibbs ts worth 4 story in himself. If you have any trouble in Daugherty, see Gibbe. Gibbs breake tn with: “Senator | Blank at Washington is on the long distance, Mr. Daugherty, Will you | talk to him now?" Daugherty dimppeara. From then jon, all day, about mix times an hour, | Daugherty has his ear to the long | distance receiver, Between calls, Daugherty recetves | men congregated in his outer office. Frequently he comes to the door | to way: | “Gibbs, wire Chat man Smith tn Chicago that I can give him 10 min utes tomorrow morning on that In dustrial peace matter, But urge bim to be here at 11 o'clock sharp.” “PUT IN A CALL, | FOR WILL HAYES” | “Gibbs, put in a cal for Wit Hayes, You'll probably find htm at Sullivan, Ind, bis home, today.” “Gibbs, wire Edward McLean at Washington, that I want to talk | with him over the long-distance at § | o'clock tonight.” | “Gibbs, | wish you'd get Mr, Hard ing on the phone for me.” | Daugherty gives the tmpreasion of | betng & young man. Hin clothes are of latest cut; his neckwear snappy. his face always cleanshaved and his nails carefully manicured. He has a hearty laugh that ts infectious, | Hoe radiates good cheer and good |hutnor, He looks Uke an athlete. | He's never known what it ts to be ‘tok. | But Dangherty tent young tn) years. He's 60 years old | STORM CENTER | FOR 3% YEARS | Thirty years ago Dangherty began being the storm center of Ohio re wooing | publican politics, Since that time| [he's made more Intense enemies and | more staunch friends than any other | Ohio politician. | While be hasn't gotten office for | himself, Daugherty unquestionadty | | has made everybody, enemies as w an friends, recognize that he is a mas. | | ter mind when it comes to political planning and execuion, | BURIED “The enemies of Dangherty,” said lone old republican leader, “have | jcrowed at least half a dozen times | that they'd buried him forever. | |it always develops that they bury | him alive, He comes up smiling, | looking for more fight. Win or lose, | he always amiles, forgets old scores | | and plays the game as a ‘regular’ re | He never bolted a ticket | But When Senator John Sherman, 20) years a0, wanted a young, vigorous | leader who could DO things, be pick. | ed Daugherty, McKinley followed | [mult and repeatedly offered Daugher- | ty big Jobs In his state and federal | administrations. But Daugherty | was “too poor” then to accept a po- itheal § SHOWED MARK HANNA | WHERE TO GET OFF | In one state convention, just to show Mark Hanna that he couldn't run everything, Daugherty threw the entire Hanna delegation out of the! joconvention and seated the anti-| Later, Hanna was | only too glad to make peace, Nobody from Ohio was more wel-| me at the White House during the Taft administration than Daugherty. It was Daugherty who managed the | t st Roc in Ohio | sevel ean leaders fol . Daugher ed the republican fight in Ohio, practically single-handed. For more than 25 elect Harding and Daugherty been as close as brothers. Daugherty | tella how the firet met. ¢ “I was bil for a speech tn the little town of Richwood and arrived late, covered with dust. I was wash. | ing dis at the pump in the back di when I notic a tall, an gular fellow a few fe ray knock. | ing the mud off his shoes. He intro-| duced himself. HARDING | INTRODUCES HIMSELF “I'm Warren Harding of Marton,’ he said, ‘and I'm running for state You don’t mind if T hang and shake hands with your| * I sald, ‘Certainly not! ‘ound owd |resuits have been lasting. Has Had No Rheumatism Since. Mr. G. V. Miller, of Monroe, Wn., Who Has Experienced the Good and Lasting Ef- fect of Being Baked in Dr. Loughney’s Curious Roast- ing Contrivance, and Whose Photo Appears Herewith, Gives Signed Statement for Publication in The, Seattle Star as Follows: In the yonr 1908 T was just about invalid from rheumati«m. a mont seriously stiffened and ful eondition. My hips were aimowt immovable; also my knees were bad ly inflamed and swollen actually the nize of a peck meanure, JI was carried into De, Loughney's effiess helpless, After 1 took but @ short of bakes I was entirely free from pain. The swelling in my knees, also the pain and inflamed condition disappeared a if by maric my hips limbered up, and I was thro with my old enemy, Rheumatism—| but what should be most interesting | to sufferers from thin dives course se-—the | I have worked steadily ever since, mont} strenuvously—fighting forest fires and blackamithing, and was subject most of the time to severe climatic changes, and still I have been free from rheumatiam ever sine While at work a few days ago | suffered « painful injury to my knee from « fell, which also badly wrenched the emall of my back, making mo quite helpless and painful and unable to stoop—to I hobbi into Dr. and after a few bakes I find I am totally recovered, and my photo which appears herewith will best f-| lustrate how thoroughly good and limber my back feels again; also how the old stiffness has remained out of my hips, even tho 12 years have passed over my head since I took the bakes before. A number of my friends who took the bakes when 1 first took them 12 years ago, still | Loughney'’s corafortabie, | homelike Banitarium tm Kirkland, | Mr, G. ¥. Miller report the mame good, lasting results I experienced. Dr. Longhney teaches his patients how to combine and pro portion their foods and eat in a reme dial way—that is the big secret of hin patients iding @ recurrence jof thelr aches and pains. The bakes lare pleasant and soothing to take I azn mort sincerely, G. Vv. MILLER, Monroa, Wash NOTE—Take ferry mt Madison © park to Kirkland, Wash., and walle | three blocks to the right, or phone Red 522, and auto will meet you, Dr. Loughney’s hours at bis Kirt land Sanitarium are 1 p.m. to 8 & m, daily, Sundays included. Chronie arthritis, neuritie ana red invalid cases expecially soll Jed. Lady nurses tn ndance, | Seattle Office Hours—Dr. Lougi> [ney can be seen personally dally |from 9 a m. to 1220 p. m. at the Hotel Congress, corner Fourth A¥@ and Marion St., Seattle, Wash, Have Dr. Loughney make a paing taking diagnosis of your casa We're virtuall Boys’ in wonderful teed. Values Values Values to $30.00, Now Now $20.00 Values to $35.00, Many suits in to $17.50, Now to $27.50, Now Mothers of Boys y giving away Suits wearing mate- rials, and many with two pairs of pants. Every suit guaran- $9.85 $14.65 $17.50 each line cost more than the price we're asking. our regular All Boys’ Hats, Caps and Furnishings Now 1/3 off low prices. See Incline Windows —— Tailored Ready Co. One of Seattle’s 401 to 407 Pike St. on every pattern in our store we will give you an EXTRA PAIR of PANTS with every SUIT or OVERCOAT Order 30002 12-inch $1.50 | Tumoreaqne. . Max Rosen Brunswick Records can be played on any Phonograph with steel or fiber necdles. 216-18 Third Ave. Between University and Sence Phone Main 3139 Z| Why can't you do some of the speak (ing? I'm dog-tired and I need help.’ | | “‘Oh, I'm too at this speak ing business,’ Harding said, | bad n nothing! I retortel ‘Tf you're good enough man to be nom. | ited for state senator, you're good | | ugh to make a speech” | “The upshot was that Harding did | practically all the talking. T sat on| | the platform and rested.” | fome hitherto unpublished history | lis coming to light now. It was Daugherty who correctly sized up the republican senatorial situation in | Z\ i914 and saw a chance for Harding » beat out both former Senator Joseph B, Voraker and former Con: | greesman Ralph « Harding, early this vear, conferred jong and earnestly with Daugherty | when he was trying to decide! whether he would seck reelection to | the senate or go after the presiden. tin] nomination, ‘The die was onst at Dangherty’s home in Columbus long after mid night Ereen in Oldest Established Dental Offices Specializing in High-Class Crown, Plate and Bridgework | pecial Attention to Out-of-Town Patients | Modern Methods—High-Class ~ Dentistry—Low Prices. These we offer you. Electro Painless Dentists Located for years at SE. Cor. Ist & Pika Phone Main 255% .

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