The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 23, 1922, Page 3

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* THE SHATTLE ‘National Prohibition Is Facing Test at Election CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct, 2%-~|in the rural distriots, National prohibition is facing the! Openly, the Antidaloon league ts | tent Inolined to sooft at the patgn tn Thruout the United States there|the three Tt holds foollah is in progreas the most serious at-| Plans to ¢ @ wtate law no it tack ever made against the Vol | wit confilct with the national con: stead act v ulte will be | stitution, known when th polled tn “Thin te just the beginning,” re- the November election. | tort the wots, “Walt and see what The chal was bound to come|bAppens after we register public sooner or later, The outoome will | Pinion.” give tho firet definite register of | California, bitter foe of prohibt- the will of the majority, tion, due to tts vineyards and its ble If prohibition adherents are in the| 14" population, ts for the second majority, as the Anti-Saloon league|M* to consider @ state measure insists they are, they will be vindi.|£" enforoing the Volatead act, ‘Two cated of the charge of “slipping 7°" So, such @ law panned by something over” when the majority | ‘2° leetslature, was halted by refer. | had ite back turned. If the weta| dum and killed at the polls, ‘The Jaro triumphant, the fight. will not next one enacted wi 4 up by! slacken until the Volatead act is| the referendum, and ts on the No modified and perhaps the eighteenth | Yember ballot. amendment repealed, [WETS WANT 75 Modification of the Volstead act | CONGRESSMEN thru raising the legal alcoholic con-| Election of 16 new congressmen tent of beverages to 4 per cent te|favoring modification of the dry law tho wets’ aim. They week to do/ Will assure beer and light wines for } this thru election of sufficient anti-|America, may the heads of the Asso ary congressmen, ation Against the Prohibition MANY STATES Amendment. |FACE ISSUE Candidates are betng listed as to ain palen an ou ts |thetr views by both sides in the | wide-spread. In practi of Hauer fight, In places whore both |the states electing lawmakers this/*T? drys, the wets take no action, | jfall, the question of prohibition in/bUt in case both are “wets,” the | recelving consideration, The old po-|AntSaloon Ie TUESDAY, 11 A. M. SPECIAL MATINEE FOR Women Only the liquor question into the | ther th nd, but In many states it)ation. They feel repeal of the law to stay “put.” unlikely, modification possible. | the long battle that eventually oust-| Where the fight has been strong fol- | by M jed saloons, the Anti-Saloon league |/ows | teter, t» on the defensive thia year, The| New York—-Fweulte of primaries | wet forces are solidified in the Asso. 8nd party conventions making cer Amendment, and have even carried /eation overwhelmingly favoring |AnthSaloon league and W. C. T. U./Senator Calder, republican and | Ohio. wet,” seeks re-election against Dr Coro: legal alcoholic content of beverages) Wet forces may 31 democrat candt.|ron of in which all the secrets of how she became ek }2% per cent, permitting use of tn-|dates for congress have declared 19 at 62 will be disclosed by toxicants in the home and making| themselves wet, and one dry; 26 re | urda More stringent the search and sels. | publicans answered ure features of the state dry law.| “dry.” Monda | Tbe Ohio senatorial and congres| New Jersey.—Gov. Edward k E4-| The [sional races are also affected by) wards, seeking senatorship on @ | that M dna Wallace }Pomerene, said to favor modified! pre | Prohibition, ts running against Con./Saloon hague and the wet organiza-/ The nounced “dry greasional delegation is likely to be | been # Iilinole will vote on a similar liq-/about evenly divided. Election of | - ue supports the one Milena, beautiful queen of |(¢ partion have vainly tried to|f¥oring repeal of the Volstead act| Montenegro and regent dur-|soveis, while he was taking part in the one wanting modift-| ing the minority of her grand- json, Prince Michael, has been For the first time since it began| The situation in several states |deposed thru a political move |tr* vy j Ohio voters will ballot this year| Copeland, democrat, with a “modifl-|to nolding an inquest, Te ° jon an initiative measure making the |cation” plank in his platform. the death of Max Venter, wet" and nine /an extensive probe into the accident STAR DEPOSED | | OLONTAL Probably the strongest jthe soreen ia ween.in “ on the beautiful young wi! jern France, Alice Terry |the beautiful young wite, | COLISEUM | “Heroes and Iusbands, ment follows the aceldent Bemis, publisher of cture has a happy jelation Against the Prghibition| tain © New York congrensional dele LITTLE BOY’S BLUE MOUSE | Big with drama of the | heen jodifics jor © ) | the fight into the birthplace of the Miedification of the Volstead act DEATH PROBED with romance, ‘big with BT big in every way x with thr Horsemen of the Apooalypm |nhowing at the Colonial theater for ja limited engagement at painiess and most lintinguiahed cert ever assembled for any pleture in the hintory of} Your now Kodelph Valentine, who plays the |leading role of Jullo, the tango king, until he centers all of his affection fe of a din |tingulshed engineer, left on the out: | nido of things as @ neutral in the war, deserted by his mweethoart when |she hears the call of duty and jotne |the French forces, enlisting in the | jinfantry and finally giving up his |life in the shell-ewept fields of North- io seen as " the lead ling role of which t# played by Kath jerine MacDonald, is a story dealing | with the life of a successful young novelist, Susanne Danbury (Kather ne MacDonald), who pays little at tention to men, preferring her work to social activities. Much excite al shooting Sumane’s & week-end party. For a the other guests he suspicion of the police, 1g8 are 6traightened out by a . Plamenatz, former min-|contesson. Susanne talle in love and ending for mown, ble adventure, ner W. Hi. Corson, preparatory |«sty Dad,’ ‘which is showing at the lay, a Blue Mouse this week ear-olk Mr. and Mra. M. C. Venter, |. 63rd st, who was killed Bat night by an automobile, began Walker, of “Over the Hit" y investigation {9 said to show Alga M. Stott, 136 ©. 6rd wierern GARDEN la splendid cast cee | the isaue, Twelve members of both "wetter than the Atlantic” platform, |st, was driving a car which #truck parties seek congressional and Senator Freylinghuysen, dry, the boy while she was taking driving on wet platforms, Senator|are fighting for the office on purely |iemons tibition Hnes, Both the Ant! / Stott, when the accident happened Garden theatre Sunday from her mother, Mra. Lillian | ‘Ure, “Extra! Extrar” at boy died in the Virginia Ma.| Undoubted triumph for Edi |eressman Simeon D, Fess, a pro-(tions are active, The elected con-|son howpital a few hours after he had | “%4 Johnnie Walker, th oar artists who have grown uor measure, which the wete de) Wm. N. Runyon, dry, as governor, | jelare certain of passage. Masea-|seema annured. chusetts, lkewine, considers @ state PENNSYLVANIA'S law legalizing beer and light wines. PIGHT IS HOT OHIO REGARDED | Pennsylvania. — Western Pennsy! AS PIVOTAL jvania, with its big distillery and Enactment of the measures tn Ill!-|hrewery properties, is the t " All This Enacted on the Stage! rH i Rots and Massachusetts is said to be ground in which the Anti-Baloon General Admission 55¢, including tax }assured, with Ohio bound to inlets and Connell of Cautdhes ate Added Attraction close. Both sides claim the Buckeye fighting election of wet-inclined con hs ” | ntate, | gressme: Alng appearing daily st | “Heroes and Husbands Perens campaigna dave been |OTS ern mens thre A_ First National Picture on waged by the Association Against! inte and what one the Prohibition Amendment in these! matrimony. .° wna states, The Anti-Saloon league ts Saturday—Constance Talmadge in “East Is West leald to have made ite campaign |largely thru the churches fn the } cities and thru ite strong followings from Hopper Showing her morning bath, toilette and intimate personal hygiene nota. i nere big mass meetings have | been held thruout the state recent: | ly, launching the drive for light! wines and beer. Mixsourl—The question of pro-| hibition has made the present sena torial campaign the bitterest in| years, Senator James A. Reed, Lif democrat, seeks élection as a de| LIIt ‘1 s 4 wet. His opponent, R. R. | Ruins the Hair | hrewster, is for « change only tf scientists say Iquor ean contain! Girle—tf you want plenty of thick, over one-half of one per cent of al | beautiful, glossy, ailky hair, do by all cohol without having Intoxicating | means got rid of dandruff, for it will |powers. Anide from this, there ts jst ® your hair and ruin it ff you |litth other prohibition sentiment, | don’t. | Indiana.John Rarleyéorn died as | It does no good to try to brush or |® political tame here, but he came jwash it out. The only sure way to|to life this fall. The Association | get rid bf dandruff is to dinsolve tt;|Amninst the Prohibition Amendment |then you destroy It entirely, To do |'* carrying on*a campaign with dit }this, get about four ounces or ordi. {fering results, Jeawe Bandera, run- | nary liquid arvon; apply tt at night, | ning for congress on a wet platform, | | when retiring: use enough to moisten |was beaten in the democratic pri == |the scalp and rub it In gently with|maries. Joseph Turk, running for | the finger tips. |congreas on the same platform, was By morning, most, if not all, of | nominated your dandruff will be gone, and three} An Anti-Saloon Iqague poll of con- eZee | Tacoma Man Tries to Breakk in Jail |7o (cr more cppiications will some |sresstonal candidates lists three TACOMA, Wash. Oct. 22—Jail has | Pletely dissolve and entirely destroy | democrats for Nght wine and beer, | Dandruff Soon A Liberty Guest Enjoys the Best Kew Here— JAMES KIRKWOOD BEBE DANIEL ANNA @. NILSSON A Paramount romance of the African diamond mines. Lig Lee and Walter Hiers Coming— “THR OLD HOMESTEAD” & totally wet delegation from lit Drys do not concede any such « Instead, they contend that| ment by a m [with the majority of people in favor | ing up which he encounte jof prohibition, they will settle the | question vated to stardom by Fox Indiana and Michigan, with | excellent work in “Over t 4 charmingly develor cent way, and he ts worthy of eee it. } STRAND } “Pink Gods” ts the story of a] 1's love of Jewels and is cen in the diamond regions o Africa. Lor Templo Off with Fingers (Mutu econ diamond broker steals istones and thus places he man's power, Exciting tn jfrom his mine. cee LIBERTY * playing at th |feudist whom he later sl in Spain, where both ha |time solving the myste ed castle, The story, by Jullan Jose 4 romance, It ts based upon @ sensational ac young reporter, in follow. | will rank ng the best photodraman of the | neanon, according to critics who al ready have reviewed tt. Johnnie * fame, has the leading role, He t# supported by The first showings of the Fox pic- the Winter marked an ina Murphy youthful rapidly in popular esteem since they were ele after their he Hill." heon, is ve. ra the Girl who hates him with reason before for keeps by sweeping into | she learns to love him. He earns her we 4 still bigger majority Op-| hatred, however, in a wholl posed to the saloons, ! ho inno- » her love because is centered ff Southerr @ebe Dan- ting a collection of us stones belonging to one of the rseif in the ncidents oo cur while Quelch ts making an effort to discover who is stealing diamonds |} Wallace Reid os “The Ghost he Liberty his week, Is drawing record crowds, | The story opens in a Southern town | |with the revival of an ancient feud. Warren Jarvis (Wallace Reid) ts forced to leave and is followed by a hoots. He} {then meete a Marin Theresa, n Span ish princess, and he goes to her home thrilling a haunt. | | j Madison coggl levery single sien and trace of it. |!n addition to Turk A ed oe _ as) Second othe ead hay Fol og You will find, too, that all itching |DRYS WIN | PRINCE : MUSICAL COMEDY oe i ee Sind pave himself up| 2h dleging of the scalp will atop. |IN COLORADO Not only has “In the Name of the | ™ oe lto Captain of Detectives John Strick. | 24 your hair will look and feel a| Colorado —~ Prohibition was elim: | Law,” now at the Princess theater, } REVUE foot we . jhundred times better, You can get |inated ax a campaign iswue in Colo: | th ment of mother love, but it HOWLAND’s / d Uquid arvon at any drug store. Four |rado at the primaries, when the only y ttt D also has a goodly portion of father | ‘With the Calltorsia Giste to “Well, I want a home for the win- bs ua all you will need, no matter [two congreasfonal candidates with i esmee! Poye = ne Jove Ge Well. the atony*hae to do] ? 20 ter again.” how much dandruff you may have.|wet planks were beaten, Colorado | stantly that corn stops hurting, then | With the life of a policeman—his lf FRANK KEENAN | Ongood claima he passed two bogus | This simple remedy never falls.—Ad- | has been bone dry since 1916, and no | shortly you lift It right off with fin. |4t home and at work—and has « cod a checks Saturday. He ts held pending | vertisement, jattempt to change the law has been |gers. ‘Truly! number of engrossing situations RULERS OF THE ROAD” jan investigation of this matter, He | ——— a tart Your druggist #eltis a tiny bottle of | Among those in the cast are Ralph Nightly | Wisconain—With renomination of | “sreegone” for a few cents, sufficient | Lewis, Claire MoDowell, E Hall, | was Jafied on a similar charge a year aKo. |qrenn were chosen in the Wisconsin | tion primaries, The wets now olaim con: | ———— ‘trol of seven of the 11 congressional {distr and are going after the | | others. | | A move to change the state proht- | lnttion law by legalizing stronger lbeer, ts Injecting the prohibition | fight Into lection of state legisla: | |tors | Minnenota.Wet support of al Ipronounced “dry as opponent of |Congresaman Volstead, author of the [prohibition law, is the outstanding |feature of the campaign, Kighty-five | |per cent of the legislature candidates jare “dry,” the AntiHaloon league de- | Jolares, after @ poll, “Pop” Grout didn’t even take |) time off for lunch DRIPPING WET Maryland.—-One senator and at} ast thres congresemen from Mary: ABARD day's work at the office today Hand will go te Sonamineton ciedeet and a harder one ahead tomorrow. ag h spree SE hy Pose cid Pop had his hands ful heaping TR | posing wots, with the latter claim fe and youngsters in the style to which they had accustomed themselves, The children learned to neglect their | old-fashioned dad and even Mother pre- | ferred bridge to home life. And then one | day the veil was torn from their pleasure- | seeking eyes and they saw their father as the grand old man that he was! RUPERT HUGHES The one great American author who tells his own story on the screen has directed a perfect motion picture, ane ing the victory, Maryland ts so wet politically that | lit was considered suicidal for any candidate to seek election under the | Volsteadian banner, The wet candi. | dates, therefore, make their issue the degree of personal wetness each | can boast, The range is from favor: | |ing modification of the Velstead act | |to “dripping wet," | “UNDER TWO FLAGS’. ,.s'c=2r,0 gute,evine icon te York, New Jersey, Ponnsyl- | the POIUTNIDIA ee } vania, Massachuesttas, Maryland, | | = Delaware, Ohio, Wisconsin, Missourt | hele pa-Fi fst i pLONy AL | cHEATRe : | | | from one to three wet states ench | and Kansas, They hope to gnain| La THOSL PRES I | || Now NOW PLAYING PLAYING | ~IN= RODOLPH VALENTINO THE HORSEMEN A picture you will remember forever NAME THE 4 OF THE OF THE APOCALYP. Tf you Wed “The Old Nest” you'll love “Remembrance” LAW aT PAINLESS Pi Feature Time—i2, 9, 4, a] 6, 10 p,m.’ rected t roduced and di Advertisement. Are You the Man Who “Never Reads Advertisements?” also has an important rol Some men, who are neither Senator LaFollette, who waa fourht | to remove every hard corn, soft corn, | Johnnie Walker, Ben Alexander and by the prohibitionista, the most of|or corn between the toes, and t the other wet candidates for con: | calluses, without poreness or irrite. Dick Morris. Emory Johnson, who he produc blind nor illiterate, claim sin- cerely that they ‘never read ad- vertisements,”’ Yet, if you could investigate, in each case you would find that the man who “never reads ad- vertisements” used an advertised tooth paste or shaving cream or soap. If he owns an automobile it will be an advertised car. If you ask his opinion of any auto- mobile he will reply in words that might have been lifted bodily from an advertisement of that automobile, Advertising has formed his opinions to a great degree. He Published by ‘The Seattle Star, in co-operation with The American Association of Advertising Agencies prey teestoeye ane gs Re ANIME 9 ttt ORR IR ER ERIN RE ATTO F. KEGEL, President You Can Heat Your | Home Comfortably | and with a decided saving in fuel if you select the | right heater. HOWARD Overdraft Heaters are 80 well known, and their fuel-saving quality so well estab- lished, that we feel it hardly necessary to speak about this fea- ture to our customers. You need only ask the person who has used a Howard. If you are going to buy a Heater, come and see the Howard before making your decision. $660 Cus etener sear acces resesescead 4 eeeeee <28EE Tore eo eres 500 YARDS OF FANCY OUTING FLANNEL 27 inches wide, in attractive striped ] Cc effects, priced, yard HISTORIC CHARACTERS _ |*™ Shakespeare, Ben Johnson and |the Duke of Buckingham. The east REPRODUCED IN FILM) includes Betty Compson, Bert Ly- tell, Theodore Kosloff, Walter Long ® In @ banquet scene in the court! and others. » of King James I. of England, which ‘* a part of the new Paramount| , picture produced by George Fits| %* 9 Q~ Caryville—T have manag maurice, “To Have and To Hold,”|Stop to telling Mary Miles Minters several historic personages have|age. The last I heard was 21. Does been reproduced. These are Will-'that answer your question? COLDS “Pape’s Cold Compound”’ Breaks a Cold in Few Hours Every druggist here guarantees; headache, feverishness, tpflamed or | each package of “Pape’s Cold Com- ee — poe La relieved i“ wi rt lose. ese re, pleasant . pound” to break up any cold and ond | tablets only a few cents and srippe misery in a few hours °F | millions now take them instead o money returned. Stuffiness, pain,' sickening quinine. PRO LAAG SEAT O HERE RK DO ee 50 NEW HOMES ‘sist H.C. PETERS SOLD FOR 400 CASH at new CITY OFFICE 726. drs AVE. Mew (UOT OF may have received his informa- tion through others who obtained their knowledge from advertis- ing. But it is a fact that no man can escape the effect of advertis- ing even if he does say he “‘never reads advertisements.” Not one of us ever reasoned out entirely from his own mind that the earth is round. If we had not read it or heard it we would never have known it. In these days of good, truth- ful, helpful advertising to say, “I never read advertisements” is merely your way of saying, “I don’t read all advertisements.”

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