The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 14, 1915, Page 6

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THIN, RUN DOWN MEN AND WOMEN GAIN IN WEIGHT FROM. TEN: Sargol, the Flesh Builder, On Who People T56, says JG Nfe tn ever reports he health was wy « they began to ‘think that there Bit you have tr ‘and ca Thin folks. st: What or how h they begin to think fo Ing to do with fles th going. making Sargol of its DBat it bet and fat-making of your meals put Four body Tf the sugar you put fee does not dissolve Bartell Drug C Gives New Vitality and Puts Firm, bt Swift's Phar: TO FORTY POUNDS New Life, New Strength,| Healthy, Stay-There Flesh Are Underweight macy. Ask Governor to Visit Church Fair Gov. Lister has been asked to come here as a special visitor to the Catholic fair in progress this week | @t the Church of the Immaculate Conception. Last night's attendance ras large, owing to an exceptionally program of music, furnished by the Knights of Columbus quar tet and Mrs. George ¥. Russell. Mayor Gill Instructs police to Serve state warrants upon request of sheriff's office whenever it can done conveniently. Best Laxative For Children } When your baby Is cross and Pretful instead of the happy, } laughing little dear you are ac-) customed to, In all probability }[ the digestion has become de- ranged and the bowels need at- tention. Give it a mild laxative, He ‘dispel the irritability and bring back the happy content of baby- {/ 4 it Jaxative for chil- dren is Dr. Caldwe' « “or | narcotic ithout griptng or oth Draggists sel] Dr free trial bottle write to Dr. W. Caldwell, 452 Washington st jonticelio, Tl. Customers bring shoes inere ry part of the city, be ir work is different. ie" bit better. REGAL SHOE | REPAIR SHOP |! First and Senecs. Main 4136 DENTAL and OPTICAL fo Suit the Hard Times No such low or strictly high vental and Opt york were ever offered ) n Seattle or elsewher You need not hurry, ay low prices will ¢ jnue while the hard times last, Edwin J. Brown, D. D. S,| Seattle's Leading Dentist. 712 Wiret Ave, Hiloek. Optical Depurtment, 703 First Ave, Washington Block. Be Sure and Come to 705 ana 713 First Ave. Open evenings until 8*and Sun. Gays unt!) 4 for people who work. Pacific Salmon boxes, t y point in the U. #. Jquarters at Prince Rupert All Charges Prepaid, $1.25 but conduct thetr fishing pe a President. | 4 Guarantect to arrive tn, pertect con. || Alaskan waters, though keeping) Nj, B, SOLNER, : Attic Also Crate, Smelt, Trout, c , bd »y remain r, 3 Baimon and ail other sea || ing outside the three-mile limit Vise Presigans tnd Tevet Offien fee the fish before shipped orthern Bank Bidg. Main 5674 | PRICES cur}: —n AND VILLA TROOPS IN MANY BATTLES, | WASHINGTON, April 14.—Half a dozen seprate batties between Villa and Carranza forces are in progress in Mexico stated here The main army of the Carran tistas, with Gen. Carranza in per sonal command, was attacking the strongly entrenched Villa army in the north, with the object of rout ing the enemy so no effective counter assault could be delivered before Carranza regained Mexico City. A decisive defeat of Villa at this today, it is }| point would break his power in the sipeen experts believe While a portion of Villa's forces! i were acting on the defensive, 20,000 veterans, commanded by Gen. Villa and Gen. Angeles, hurled them- selves against the troops of Gen. Obregon in Matamoras, Neuvo, La- redo and Tuxpam. This move was supported by al most the entire artillery of Villa's army Great pressure was brought bear but Obregon kept his flying over the three cities and resisted stubbornly at all points of j contact. MOTHERS WILL ASK FOR BAN ON CRIME FILMS Movie lovers must be more dis | creet, and no more late tipsy home |comings will be shown on the screen} if the resolution which Mrs. Glenn | Humes of the Seattle Mothers’ con |greas is carrying to Spokane today jis passed by the state convention meeting in that city. The resolution expr fon of the Seattle cor more strict censorship of films must be observed if the minds of child movie patrons are to remain unper. verted, and put the ban on all mur der, suicide and other scenes having degrading influence. They urge state and national odies to co-operate to the end that 4 more strict censorship be estab lished With Mra, Humes are a number lof other prominent Seattle women dele, eaten | to the state » conference \ENGLISH TRAWLERS FISHING IN ALASKA SEWARD, Alaska, April 14, | Driven from the North sea by float two British steam| are fishing in the Gulf of ing ording to the report} Company tne Usted Moel cutter iannhis which arrived me Will continue to ship Salmon, aver- || Sitka aging ® ds, Aressed, in Individual The re make their pe as, Funeral of C. E. Rowe, son of Bishop Rowe of Alaska, held here Wednesday morning + | Magerent spirit of sacrifice and patriotiam is shown aloe d Ing as a street car conductor in P: working as a * emithy.” to Women iCorrespondent of Star Interviews Leaders ‘ Forces Abroad on are playing hero paris In war wo lees than the men of bel nations. Something of im the follow! articles Mar correspondents. Amertew Workers have predicted equal would be accorded French and Germ , |wemen for the pert they are playing te [ihe manic strugste | BY CARL W. ACKERMAN (Copyright, 1915, by the United|*omen now drive cabs, run street Press) ears and omnibuses. Beven thou sand women of the leisure class, | BERLIN, April 9—(Via The twomen who had never done a| Hague.)—"German women are ‘oke of work in their lives, re ‘| earning their right to suf- nded promptly to the govern. y| frage,” says Frau Kommeraien. | ent's recent call for women work ers, And the call was for women rat Hedwig Hey!, an intimate to 46 manval work—what the friend of the German empr world has always regarded as and chairman of the Ge central commission in charge of women’s activities In the war. “The ballot will come to the women of Germany when the war is over. The government will fing that we have been so that our ald Frau Heyl is one of the leading business women of Germany. She succeeded her late husband = w president of the world-famous Hey! chemical works. Instead of making chemicals ex \clusively in these war times, her factories are now preserving fruits and canning vegetables Frau Heyl received me through the kindness of Miss Margaret |Glenn, dayghter of Gen. Glenn of | 8. army. jthe U When the war broke out,” sald this gray-haired, kind-faced wom- an, “the ‘club-belonging set’ of Ber lin decided what women should do land what advice they could give that was worth while. That day |terior and by night our plan had been accepted. “We telegraphed to every of Germany a few hours later | “The next day, under our central commission here in Berlin, was or ganized a national help service. We also directed and the Red Cross, through the aiding of the sick and poor wom en's organizations Then we submitted to the gov Jernment suggestions for the con- servation of supplies of potatoes Siand game. Naturally we know | Feat deal about the food situation and can advise the government bet | Safe and Sure Foe be your relief from indi- \gestion, biliousness, or consti- pation. Known to be reliable jand famous for their prompt and certain efficacy—are Beecham’s Pills Largest Sele of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In bones, 10¢., 2c. Union Savings & Trust Co. OF SEATTLE part Resources Nearly $5,000,000 WHY NOT SAVE? A dollar on your deposit working for you day and night. Interest 4 Per Cent |JAMES D. HOGE, | HOGE BUILDING In the Heart of the Financial thetr | United Press Staff Correspondent we went to the minister of the in-; the Vaterland bund) MINNESOTA TO book is a silent partner) STAR—WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1915. European women, as shown In the pictures above, driven to It by the war, are doing a wide variety of things once only considered man the second shows a German woman working as a street cleaner in Munich; aris; ~* ee * The War Will Give Vote of 3 Countries of Suffrage tor on ) that polut thee men.” ‘SIR JOHN FRENCH LATEST CONVERT | TO WOMEN'S CAUSE BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH LONDON, April 13.—I1n England! man’s work Of the gallant women who are nursing the wounded at the front it Is only nec ry to say that their valor and lency have con verted to the cause of woman suf. land, the man who was! frage to nown as the most rabid antieuf. in the British emptre—Field al Sir John French, com | jer-in-chief of the British forces. For years the activities in the tiffrage cause of Mrs. Despard, the general's sister, had estranged him) from her | He opposed her publicly and |snubbed her privately Then the war came, and hun dreds of suffragets volunteered as Pankhurst witles for suffrage and became a volunteer recruiting officer And such was the power of the service of the suffraget war that on one of the few leaves of absence which the British commander-in-ehief has taken since the outbreak of the war he went to London, sought out his sister, ! |Mre, Despard, at suffrage head. | quarters, pat both his arms around | her neck and said, his voice thrill-/ ing with re sed emotion | “My dear—i w: brave women deserve every: thing Englishmen can give you. Henceforth | am the friend of woman suffrage!” wrong. You BE AFLOAT SOON, COMPANY SAYS Great Northern Steamship com pany officials here are confident the liner Minnesota, aground since Sun day night in the Inalnd of day night in the Inland sea of The balance of the cargo is being shifted from forward compartments to the stern By this shifting it is hoped to raise the ship's nose out of the mud sufficiently to permit its being }towed out. Pumps have kept hold | No. 1, where the Minnesota was | punctured by a rock, practically free lof water, and it {s belleved little | damage was done Officials here have been in con- stant cable communteation with the liner since the accident. The Minnesota's 10 steel air and | water-tight compartments make her | practically unsinakble sea AUTHORIZE PAVING The county authorized the mmissioners have aving of a road connecting E' highway with 85th st., with concrete. Expendt tures will not exceed $10,000 HOW TO CURE STOMACH TROUBLES Excessive acid in the 1s pri. marily res arly all canon of Indigestion, dyspepsia, gas tritis and flatulence, and quite tre quently leads to stomach ulcers. The | ul treatment f well an the prove cure of such cases n neutralising the tralizes t i med sto h and if regularly will quickly remove the cause District. 5 trouble and effect complete relief—~Advertisement, PAGE 6, ® work ‘OFFER REWARD FOR 3.2! (222).c4, 8! oi ALLIES’ WARSHIPS him lying t € * for thr hours Th > him of THUGS WHO BEAT ii: ou nis ssincont DARAGES, aca The me ved Miller from AND ROBBED MAN»: of them slvRged! LONDON him over d, remarking that winnd ~ he was nothing but “a stool pigeon | “9 A reward of $100 has been offer. for Frye eae ed today by the Frye Packing Co wa te r the arrest and conviction of ree men who msnulted lo Musical will be given at Miller, an employe, Tues ight, Methodist Protestant church down the beak. at “May night Days to Do e pa Left to right, the first picture shows a French woman work- the third shows Bavaria n women helping to build a railroad, and the fourth an English woman dispatches dee are warships of the al- 1 fron re seriously dam- by the Turkish forts. The h press bureau passed this t as unconfirmed, but all dis- che’ tioned th: it! r sources men- e of the attack APRIL 24TH IS THE LIMIT—OUR CREDITORS WON’T WAIT ANY LONGER—-WE MUST DIG UP THEIR MONEY BY THE 24TH OR IT’S ALL OFF WITH US. REALIZING THAT CONDITIONS ARE SUCH THAT OR- WILL BE REFUSED. WE ARE DESPERATE AND MUST HAVE MONEY REMEMBER, OUR STOCK IS ALL BRAND NEW — NO OLD.-TIMERS. EVERYTHING THAT IS NEW IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S CLOTH- NG, HATS AND FURNISHINGS, REPRESENTED. Men’s $10 and $12 Suits $4.69 i i ae ee Men’s $15 Suits $7.85 Men’s $20 Suits $4.00 Men’s Pants $2.39 MEN’S HATS $2.00 Men’s Hats 89c $2.50 and $3.00 Men’s Hats $1.39 15¢ Men’s Sox 6c 15c Bell Brand Collars Ic 4c Men’s Underwear 50c Fleece-Lined Undershirts 19c $1.50 Union Suits 79c $1.00 Union Suits 49c B. V. D. Underwear 33c $9.85 Men’s $1.50 Pants 63c a $2 Men’s Corduroy 98c TS $2.50 Men’s Pants $1.00 Neckwear Suit Cases $1.39 37c At cost and less. Union Label Clothin FIFTH AND PIKE "diac Nekaae” ee ae pick from one lot of Boys’ Suits, valucs to $5.00 98c $3.50 Boys’ Suits $1.69 $5.00 Boys’ Suits $2.98 Boys’ Pants, 75c, now ae. oye Whe Matas Night Shirts, 75c, now 23¢ $2.50 Union Suits $1.29

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