The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 29, 1922, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

her American Homes Bureau; Bor Better A: \ iS a somal ail MAUL) Ug 9 rin i 7 " NR DOWN CJ, pounds heavier than the average malleable range. \\ —trade in your old stove | | as part payment SALE! _ EMPRESS |" MALLEABLE RANGE | (GUARANTEED 15 YEARS) | 100 to GO at this price | while quantity lasts— | you save $35— regular price was $130 here’s the reason: _—to secure a maximum amount of business—there’s _ the reason. To keep their immense plant running at full capacity, the makers of the BEST Malleable range in America agreed to furnish, to a limited number of their very largest distributors, Malleable Yanges at a great price concession—providing ranges ‘would be re-sold at an extremely low margin of profit. And so 100 of these ranges were allotted to us, which we now offer at the unprecedented price of $95—. With porcelain splasher back, $10— extra. | | | | } 1 —f-hole range. Hand-riveted throughout, 16r81 tn oven. Concealed flue, Mercury thermometer. Non- warping construction. Heavy nickel plate trim- mings and many other new features. Funeral Services for Mrs. Richards Wilson’s College ._ to Star at Session > “The Consummation of an Ideal”) funeral services for Mrs. Lena : rad ald byes Fone cape gnarl | Richards, 61, resident of Seattle for of Wilson's Modern Business col- | 33 years, will be held at 2 p. m. Wed Teae, at the 100 Per Cent club lunch. | nesday, at Johnson & Hamilton's un- fon Tuesday noon, at the Bungalow. dertaking parlors, Mrs. Richards I eeenesacacenasinapeateanaianeaanannsnanaaanaaaA, | Was born in Norway and came to this | country 50 years ago. She lived at | 113 Seventh ave. N., Seattle. TRAVEL BY AUTO to PORTLAND of Teeth Free From 9 to ll —— -00 Complete FREE EXAMINATION GLOBE OPTICAL Co trceal fo 99 Dar EQ, A real specialist in charge of our Candied Laxative Wafers Plate Department. MOVIES | Gold Crowns, 22K...... For infants, children or adults. 350 at all drug stores, or sent, p. p., by | Radiographs — the only reliable Pe method of knowing the exact condi- eee ae <> Buran —-ASver- | 110m of your teeth. One Xray free, Our treatment of pyorrhea 1# con- a sidered the best; $2 per tooth. In One Location for 21 Years BOSTON DENTAL CLINI 1420% Second Avenue vara s j | sramme of the insurgents, with # PAY ONLY ! $5 DOWN ia thee j | ‘This was undoubtedly the turn: toh, THE STORY OF A SENATOR | Mx | history records that he was a man of decided opinions and that he was frequently em- broiled in bitter controversies with his brother senators, Bo much for his Inherited traits, Miles Poindexter was born in Memphis, Tenn., Apri! 22, 1868. Am a child he moved to Virginian and was educated there, being graduated in law from Washing: ton and Lee university in 1891 Immediately after graduation he came West and set ted In Walla Walln, practicing law, The following year, 189%, two of the most Important events of his entire life took place, First, he married Mins Klizabeth Gale Pa of Walla Walia—a sinter, by the way, of Tom Page, Seattle attorney, who is now running for reelection to the legislature. Second, he started his public career by being elected prosecuting attorney of Walla Walla county. He was elected, by the way, on the democratic ticket—as, born and reared in the South, he naturally subseribed to the political beliefs of his forefathers. He remained in Walla Walia unth 1897, when he} took hin family to Spokane, his present home. He wasn't long in making himself known in Spokane, and the following year, 189%, he was appointed deputy prosecuting attorney, In which capacity he served until HIFY CAN have anyi biog to of! The hentU-serker that Seettio has n What Insurgency Meana Mr. Poindenter is @ pajition! querril In A Ateerter from the Democratic party and & copstant, opponent of every portion of the party programm of the Repudlicans, he commands Relther respect nor Influence to either | j camp. Me is admitted in the caucus jof neither party, but. professes alle ance to @ faction, known In con ~| Gress as the insurgents, and promises. if elected to the senate, to work with the insurgents. The legislative pro- SSS SSS SS Mr. Po! has acted end with | whom be seye be will act fm future, 1904, Dyeing thin period he once for prosecuting to t0-fatlower le AttOrNey—MBA received the only defeat to be found on 4 his political Pecord——so for, Thin defeat, at that, was ‘The Insurgents demand Jowor taritt dution end, particularly, the tree ad- misaion of raw @ateriaie. If the tn surgent programme were carried Into | 5, ‘| tttect @ Deavy Diow would be struck |to existing Industrie tn this state, aod (he prospect of further induet: | Deing established bere would be ro mote ‘The Insurgents steadily aad uacom- probably more due to the fact that he was a democrat than amything else, Atl any rate, the defeat was only a temporary set back, @,. noon afterward, he wan elected & superior court judge and he served on the bench until 1908 Then he was elected to congress from the Third Warhington district. The congresstonal directory myn Mt Was 48 & “progressive republican"—but anti-Cannon Ite would be nearer the mark, an there were no pro: greasiver, in the Rooseveltian meaning of the term, at Se ee combination with the Democrata, suo cveded 1p defeating the passage of any meaure to that end af the last sension of congress, The commercial expan ton of the United @tatee and the commercial expansion of the city of ‘ Seattio demand @ relief from the pres | e0t dependence epos our commercial rivals to do our carrying across seas. The ineurgeate stendity oppose every suggestion for naval facrease, end especially the further building of Dattlesbips, The protection of the sxe | coast states, particularly (bose Pacitic, demands « navy lar to @ ington | Promisingly oppose every bit of legie that time. However, there can be no question but fF lation to Delp toward costering the what he was about as progressive a republican as § American merchaot marine, and, in could be imagined during that first term in Wash Hundreds of men have been elected to congrem, just an Poindexter was; have served thelr terms—and then returned to the obscurity from which they were drawn. Men just an big as Poindexter, too. But there chance enters into the equatlon— chance and the fact that Poindexter was—and still bs—an opportunint. Those were critical times when Poindexter wan first elected to congress. After eight years of Rooseveltian | republicantam, the people had accepted a substitute in the person of William Howard Taft. They had been aswured that he was “Just as good” by no less a person than Roosevelt himeelf—but he was faking to make good on the guarantee, and the rumblings which four years later were to bring the progressive party inté being were already being heard around the capitol butiding at Washington TAKES CRITICAL STEP AGAINST CANNON ua’ 4 both coasts, The ineurgenta, representing @¢ & vsltorm rule, to Bel which Mr. Poindexter otters the esiy|» bajr| *Bemtiom, Interior states, are opposed |" 4 4 ve wei te opeatangn pidpoonschincrad bed Chance ordained that Washington should wend to ; congress a man who had but recently been mulvaged from the ranks of the democratic party. But it was his trait of opportuniam which caused Poindexter to | harken back to his eariler teachings and season hin | republicanism with Just enough democracy to appeal to the heart of « boss-ridden nation, ter Joined were destined to make the nation, He ts one of the three political history-—and the coun & national identity, whose try recognized that fact. Imme- ts recognized beyond the diately each of them became the ders of his own state, and whose subject of editorial comment, not only in his own bailiwlek, hut the country over, Because this was no local matter—it was national, How one standpat Keattle paper viewed Poinderter’s stand against Cannontem in 1909 and 1910, “A politi- , cal guerilla,” he wes called. His first vote in the house of rep- was against “Cannon the despotic rule of the ven | egular” speaker } ing point in his career, No other step which he could have taken, short of committing murder ot arson, could have brought him s@ Instantly and so prominently into the public eye. Tho little group of “insurgents” whom Poindex- | bis personal constituency, Miles | Poindexter, after one year in con- rene, is & big man and his politieas future looms large and alluring be- fore him. “The uplifting Impetus which has To the standpat press the name | brought him from the commonplace Poindexter became synonymous with | ranks of a mere western representa: that of Judas Tecartot, and he wae | tive, from the level of political medi- “read out of the party” by every pa-| ccrity to the"helghts of national no- per that subscribed to republican| tics, is hie courage, his daring to principles. stand up against the anger of Can. By the progressive prees, on the! non, to scorn the deprivation of pat- other hand, he was lauded to the/| ronage and committeeships, and to wkion. ally himeelf with the minority, Me ‘The people at that moment were tn | went before the people of his such @ mood that {t Is questionable | trict dy an opponent of Cannon and an to which endeared Poindexter to|Cannonism and made good his pre- them more—his denunciation by the | tection promises, “regulars” or his acclamation by the; “It may be that Mr. Potndexter tr == progrenstven, hot #0 politically courageous as he te Lifebuoy babies Possibly the following Attortal, far weving: that he ts lese Of «pe ; printed in The Star, Jan. 14, 191 itical hero than a politician of good have beautiful, long before there was any talk of | Judgment, healthy, comfort- him for nenator—mirrors conditions IN BOLD RELIEF “Of the three men tn the house of representatives from Washington,” it ‘a: @ the caption: “It pays to| lus his conduct has been profitable | ness of v them too young in using and that his course has |caises and tottering dynasties, but | beech animated and guided more by | the world has a brutal habit of for comen. going down to ruin and oblivion, and (© one axide from Mr. Poindexter the men who were able to discern can answer thie question, but the fact | its finish with the naked eye are now remains that, irrespective of the stim: | reaping the rewards for thelr clear. n, While those who could ‘ of that time better than anything | cool and crafty calculation than by | getting all about this devotion when able skins. peal the hot impetuosity of political/the crash You cannot start STANDS OUT righteousness, |Insurge.” “Miles Poindexter stands out tn bold relief before the gaze of man who will make his mark, and by the same | who goes before the people as an In- surgent is the man who will go to to him. The man who goes to con-| not, or would net see, are paying the grens today as an insurgent ts the| penalty of their political myopia, | “To the people of this state Mr, reasoning the candidate | Poindexter happens to be the anost conspicuoun exa: events. Compa: | AMUSEMENTS |, .. $4.00 FF | 8. 8. _|(Vital Statistics BIRTHS Rirths tn their households are re- the following Se bors so «reat. — | McCauley, Edward B, Quarry, boy. | PAYS TO BE Plentini., Amandeo, 4529 Ninth a¥®. | ON PEOPLE'S SIDE Hilbert, John K., Vernon hotel, boy Johnson, Karl W., 2217 42nd ave. & W., boy Haminariund, Rdwin ¥, 6677 Fourth ave. N. B., boy. Lee, Elmer, Airdate Apt Britton. Frank Mathew, congres. Insurgency was never #0 popular as it is now, and never were the recompenses for revolutionary la “Altogether, with sneers, then pity, the movement has grown until it would now seem to be the only course of windom to join in with it “There may be a fine romantic roma ab then hate, |/of the people.” doy, 4 Belmont pi. boy Pexzelia, Joe, 644 Concord at, girl Barnes, W, B, 6047 20th ave, N. B., suggest themselves and careers the | reverse of that of Mr. will readily come to mind. | it tm cheerful to be! able to feel certain that for once in our political history it pays, and “From the minority, firat greeted | pays handsomely, to be on the side | (Tomorrow wo will get Into the real “story of the senator” and give an account of Potndexter’s election | it clinging loyally to lost! to the senate in 1910) umoring the Nerve Centers rhe firs bedi oring (9 Cn ees anced o~ presen and tensan. Note he Haig helical springs nnceting wet only the bet thy ones A Not, tons rer. into Sound Sleep In youth sleep comes easily with the close of day. Later in life it is a very different matter. Scientists have discovered much lately about the phenomena of sleep—especially in relation to the tense life of these stirring times. ° = e The thing that misleads people when they go out to buy Bed Springs is the fact that a bed spring /ooks easy to make. On the other hand—you may appreciate the Simmons “Ace” Spring more truly when you know that it took nearly two years of experiment and scien- tific test to develop the practical balanced compression and ten- sion of this wonderful Spring. Ie is this kind of thing that your friends, your neighbors and your dealer nvean when they tell you that Simmons Bed Springs are built for sleep. Not a lot of wire and angle iron rushed through a factory. But the product of an intimate knowledge of sleep and its causes. An engineering science ade- quate to embody the principles of sleep in a bed spring and a deep sense of responsibility for sleep. Simmons Springs—Built for Sleep $5.50 to $50.00 Simmons Beds—Built for Shep $8.00 to $75.00 Simmons Mattresses Built for Sleep $10.00 to $60.00 Purple Label lusuriously upholetered with halr—Sqn00 Be sure to see the Simmons Label on Bed, Spring and Mattress before you buy The Simmons Label is your assurance of sleeping equipment duslt for sleep. All ynuine Simmons Beds, Springs and attresses have it. No ethers have. Ee The “Madison” Design 1328 An exquisite example of bed design in the early Colonial manner. Beautifully finish- ed in “hand rubbed” brown Mahogany end American Walnut. Price $75.00 cach. SIMMONS BEDS Built for Sleep Cannoniom is mple of this trend of | risona will of course | Potndexter | girl Okano, Kinpet, €67 Main et, girl ave i | Pimples Keep Nishiyama, Kikujiro, 625 Sixt! 8, boy. | Uyeda, Hyakutaro, $17 Eighth ave, girl. eirt N., Y | oung Men | | ard, Allen B., Bothell, b | Homgren, David I. oy. TiN. Voth at. Down! |r s | ave. hoy Tuttle, Menford F., 9939 Wallingtora Badda, Charles B 6633 44th ave, 8 Ww. gir They Make Women, Too, @ Puzslel wilsin, Albert, 2423 Broadway N., How S. S. S. Stops Skin girl. Eruptions P: |Bowman, William C, 1119 W. 61st . at, boy. r . Bernard C., 410 29th ave. Pimples an4 skin eruptions have a Pronson. be Renee abe panto on yout tons, ids, Even, 921 Bropdway N., girl. Pimples produce prejudice and prevent prowerto, Your heart may be gold, | MARRIA LICENSES Name and Residence, Age. | Berton, Basle M., Seattle | Pallausch, Pearson, Ovcar, Deming . Hudson, Gertrude, Belling! Villesvik, Geberhard J, Bremerton 26 Stommer, Ida, Seattle 28 Leldy, Lewis M, Auburn Bruck, Louise T., Auburn ‘Wise, John A., Seattle . Salvo, Mary, & Furst, Hdward L., ow Oa eae TT Net Contents 15 Fluid Dr Miller, Kenfroe, ttle .. Hudson, Marjorie Merle, Seattle .. Brown, Francis L., but who wants to Pimply men don't look of anything, Pussies, wit por Kies oruptiona? | ji.)) i owners | lid. I herine v thews, Charte 3 Hizaby the positive way out. Physica and | ives will fail. What you need | a scientific blood-cleanser. §, 8. 8. one of the most powerful royer blood impurities. You can prove t in a short time 8. 8. an ber Passed on by a jury of millions of peo- Plo just like yourself. It in considered one of th blood erson, Kimer, Tacoma . ‘guson, Ruth '., Bismarch, N, ), <p resets nd why you hear of so | Berman, Frances 1. about 26 years. t people putting on | Peterson, John, 64 years Jost flesh ine hurry, why you hear of so | rtney, Bertha, 87 yeara, many rhoumatica being freed from this | Middleton, Joseph B., 42 gears, scourge, with 8. Start today with | Webb remiah M., 64 years and see your fac | idor H., 72 years, in get rudder, Tt will give you a boost in yor AtOmonths olt 35 Dosis 40s pis clear and " Aurelino, & mont er Advertisement Downey, John, 16 youra, aN Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Thirty Years CASTORIA ‘THO CORnTAUR Company. Hewvenn erry, FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY and for every discriminating taste, styles that will bring comfort, pleasure and economy to the wearer, plus the advantage of securing our E ; T A E | R Y Ss. that will meet your own convenience OUR TERMS ARE THE MOST LENIENT AND THE VERY BEST IN THE STATE iis a Be ae =

Other pages from this issue: