The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1915, Page 4

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STHIRTY DOLLARS! HUM. THAT AFINE SALARY FOR AGTAR TO ) i as onl Beripps Nor The th at Seattle, Wash s “AT THAT r RATE AN “EXTRA” LIKE YOU, MRS. MOSNAGG, MUSTN'T FARE VERY ( “THAT'S A Fact, WELL* 1 GET ONLY $2 4 Day” bitshed Datty| The Star Seattle Star one year, $2.60) @ months $1.90; » Postofficn as sec elty, 28¢ a month per nd month up tom: ans matter Ny carrier, The A Children's Cemetery, Set Apart Than 2,000 Children Who Havé Died as a RF: Cry of ‘the Poles by the German Authorities in Lodz, Which Contains the Bodies of More uit of the War In Poland. The cry of the Belgian women and chil- | hands before his eyes to shut out the mon Vdren for bread was awful. It was heard. | strous infamy rica answered with shiploads of food. | Already Poland was a cemetery, but today | There now goes up a still more terrible, | they're putting corpse on corpse pitiful ery —the cry of the homeless Here is a cemetery containing the bodies oon starving millions of Poland, that land | of 2,000 little children who were shot to (freshly sown with shot of invaders and | death or starved to death! demonstra- | From east to west, west to east, south ons of men, that pitiabl of the brutality of monarc hial greed | to north, north to south, war's bloody scythe Ay Poland? There is no Poland. There's | mowed and mowed again. a Polish victim under the talons and | And, today, 10,000,000 Polish workmen, ws of the eagle and the bear | and women, and children gnaw roots nd Once great among the greatest, Poland | the bark of trees, and shiver in caves, swamps a mere memory, a nation ground into | and thickets. | the dust by foreign heels, subdued, smoth American sympathy shot forth like the glare ed by the merciless power of foreigners, her | of an electric search-light at the outrage upon territory the prize ye foreigners, her na- | Belgium partakers of Polish spoil, with van to slaughter Poles. and folly of it. _A Real Patriotism big city in the Union, instead in autos in Seattle Every veteran and every m Women’s Relief Corps was thus The appeal of the Tilikums generously responded to When Britain grapples Germany, the civ- | “ilized world cries out against the crime | Fo the first time in the history of any | f the veterans of the civil war were relieved from a toilsome march in the Decoration Day parade and rode There autos on hand than were needed tionality perishing under the oppression of | There's Poland, outraged, drawn and quar foreigners, her sons slaughtering each other | tered, her quivering limbs used as food for im behalf of foreigners, nothing hers save | foreign cannon, brother slaughtering brother, ibmission, hopeless. | while millions of their women and children Westward, across hill, valley and steppe, | starve tomes Russia's horde, and in the van Poles | It has been argued that all America’s to slaughter Poles. | relief of victims of the European war has} Eastward comes Prussia and Austria, joint | been poor policy. Without it the war would | | STAR—TUESDAY, JUNE 1, "BUT YOU DON'T WORK ERY DAv.* _ evi SOMETIMES "OH WELA, I WRITES SCENARIOS AND 1 SELLS 1915. PAGE 4. “BUT THAT ISN'T A LIVING YeT, How DO You MAKE BoTH eNOS eo aeeyS TAWES im SEWING! * Seattle men who are getting there or who arrived. They tell of them- selves and their methods. have really "ARTHUR NEILSON MAKES FEW REMARKS ABOUT BEDS | A ev er Quite a bo! @ “Firing on a railroad taught me how to sell beds—it taught me application. If any man needs application, a fireman does, You w atch the gauge and shovel! And shovel! @ “If you have good beds, I can sell them, because, as a B. & O. fireman, I’ have slept on the worst beds in the world @ “New Yorkers buy many beds, though I don't know why—they so seldom go t hed NEILSON setis| RTHUR beds, The intelligence is of keneral interest, inasmuch as erybodys sleeps, and almont ybody goes to bed when #) million people in the thwest find easement for aching nes ond refreshment for tired minds every night in the beds that Netisc them This conservative estimate, b on the er neous t ry that s never sleep two in a bed | get at it in another way. If money Netivon has taken in for s in the past year were prorated € rs woman and hild in Alaska, British Columbia, Washing ton and Oregon would get two-bits From thin it will be seen that Nelison sells a lot of beds 1 epared himself for seller by firing a locomotive on the B. & O. This statement of act. unless explained, sounds lke onmenae is, however, gospel true Firleg on » rallroad. Netleon says, “tanght me application. If . n om « fire man doe You w gauge and shovel! And shovel! If you quit shoveling, the steam goes down. the train falls behind schedule, and the whole system is tied up ball from an chum The boiler exploded Nellson's train was the Cannon out of Washington. He fired Baltimore to Brunawick, Md, nd back He quit ratlroading Also a fireman when his was killed It took all the! romance out of raflroading for Net)- son clate a good W st | Poles in the | sooner end, and there is plenty of suffering) } at home It may be good argument More Belgian misery may be the cure for | Belgian misery When nationless Pole takes his brother But that cry of ten million in Poland for by the throat at command of those who out- | bread must make the last spare cent in every raged, divided Poland, the devil puts his | American pocket burn with white-hot heat. |. Ninety jitney drivers contributed to this} ine tribute to the heroes of a great war—a war distinguished from the butchery now go ing on in Europe by the big fact that it was a struggle for a great principle. Seattle did itself proud on Memorial by its splendid co-operation to make for the comfort possible for these veterans. How ever we may differ on the immediate inter national complications, Seattle attested yester day that it is united on all things essentially | Ame rican_and_patriotic ember of the taken care of for autos was were more CUCUMBER SEASON Editor The Star: It is a dandy Ye to plant cucumbers. 900 can raised on a lot 15 feet square in season, planting in shallow trenches to hold moisture at roots, It has been done “already yet.” | Later plunge the cucumbers in cold) 4 water or cool on ice, slice, salt, pep-' | Firtng on a railroad,” saya Nel taught me something beside Heation. It taught me to appr ed. You are not per haps, familiar with the hotels along th eB. & O. Oh, Lord! ee. HEN Netlson quit rafiroad ing, he took his nerve in both hands and went to the mmons Manufacturing Co. and asked for a job selling beds on the road, He knew about the Simmon Manufacturing Co. because, a fireman, he had switched trains alongside the company’s plant. With corns on his paims and | cotton-waste still clinging to his jumpers, he penetrated the offices of the bed-manufactory, | and said: “If you have good beds, | can sell them; becaus a8.4 | O. fireman, | have slept on the | worst beds in the world.” | was mistaken, They gave him the Southern States for territory and, com. | pared with the beds he tossed on in jerk-water towns in the South, the B. & O. beds were | downy couch: In two years he increased the firm's Southern business from nothing much to year. 4 Then he was transferred Arthur T. Neilson to New York, Pennsylvania and Jers then. We were ‘drummers A West Virginia. drummer’ wore flashy clothes, I state, without fear of contra-| played a nice game of pool, a heady| diction,” says Neflson, “that more! game of poker; he could—and did business is transacted In New York) teil many stories, which were sup: city and 1 th between the hours of 6 p. day tha I » seldom when you come to think of It, Southerners, m.| posed to be funny because they rest of| weren't decent; and he had a New Yorkers buy many| cheaply grand manner which awed don't know why-—they/and fascinated village girls. When Ko to bed. It ts odd.) not otherwise engaged, he sold that! goods. sleep so much,! He paid more attention to pad- a. m. than fn all the who should be so easily satisfied in the! ding his expense account than to} important matter of beds. ple of the Northwest those of the East and the South in) iike tha | sleep manager of the Simmons Manufac-) turing Co. here and another in Portland. | Now he has salesmen working! Wholesome-looking, |for him. “Since I started,” slow, |has come tn the type of traveling jwas the man who could drink the - ye | most liquor. “We did not call ourselves travel ing salesmen or commercial travel they work hard daytimes and) wanted. soundly nights.” EB The peo-| unitke! getting new business The traveling salesman is not that. The hard-drinker isn't The company’s represen- {tative on the road must be as dig | nified in deportment and as sober SON was on the road 12|12 bis habits and as honest in his Then in 1910 he came dealings as the president himself.” | Northwest AP ae | RS ee somehow, looks lke | & successful bedseller That) is, he is well-fleshed and! and he has the} jalert, clear-eyed seeming of a man he says, “a|/Who bas spent nine dreamless but withal startling change| hours in a comfortable bed He is an ardent motorist, are years, to Seattle to be He had a big branch} an in-| |salesmen. When I made my first watiable golfist, and an incurable trip, the man who sold the most) Tilikum, being Tyee of the Moxt| |gooda and made the most money) tribe EDITOR MINNIE B. FRAZIER ARMY NO PEACE SURETY Editor The Star In an article per, add vinegar and eat at once—, cumber. a bushel at a meal! ver soak wrinkle and make leathery tn briny water. There is no more polson Q in cucumbers than in potatoes, to- Printed recently about Italy's go matoes or watermelons. ing to war, you said “Italy is well The poison is in the old superstition—the, Prepared for war.” poisoned fear—the curse of mother) Italy being “well prepared for earth, who gave us the luscious eu-| War is likely why the “public” was |so eager for a battle. In Italy tt If you are suffering from aczema, ring worm or similar itching, red, unsightly skin affection, bathe the sore places with Resinol Soap and hot water, then ently apply pe will be antoniahed how in: antly the itching stops and healing begins. In most cases the skin quickly be comes clear and healthy again, at very littie cost. Resinol Ointment, is so nearly fe colored that {t can be kept on the face bands or other exposed surtace with- out attracting undue attention Besinol Ointment and Resinol Soap also clear BU ace” roughness and dandruff, eee eee rcccse sess sessessesSHeeseseeeeese Try this easy way to heal your skin with ® Resin alittle Resinol Ointment. e is highly probable, as it e where, that “the people” . about 10 per cent e e tion Many of those who were eager for | war are likely staying at home as arm-chair soldiers, while many of those who opposed it will have to do the fighting Being prepared for war does not guarantee peace. What we need in this country 1s to put the power to declare war into the hands of the is else represent of the popula. vote Then we should prepare jour defense. And by this plan those who vote for aggressive war would have to be the ones to do the fight ing WM, BROWN Selleck, Wash AYE, AYE, SAYS HENRY Kditor The Star; If you could hear the favorable comments upon your articles roasting Seattle's in efficient, dormant, stupid park com missioners, t be would please you ond expression The port's public roof den which # 18 to displease the board, is one of the best advertisements Ithe city has. HENRY BROADSTONE. Betw round-t For full information, reserva Tel, Daily TRAINS DE LUXE The last word in modern, up-to-date service STEEL TRAIN EQUIPMENT “-ON— NORTHERN PACIFIC RY. ween SEATTLE and PORTLAND ant aight tan Do you think I ht take some more?” SPOKANE LIMITED ro vell” | Feplied | the host, “1 don't U O RB | do "e thin, & couple more would SEATTLE and SPOKANE | rcs ae | The famous Northern Pacific Dining Service on all day trains. Overdosed | | Doctor—From now you may | | let your husband have a glass of : beer every day. You under. | Cursion Fares ends Wife—Yes, -doctor—just one hope you have kept ae that one glass per day that I al- May 15 to Sept. 30. Low lowed your husband to take? rip fares*to all points in Wife—Most decidediy, doctor— Middle West and Eastern Return limit, tions, J. O. MeMULLEN, City Pa Elliott 6750 107 Yesler Way, Seattle, Wash. | A. TINLING, A. G. F. @ P. A, | 2023 Smith Building, Seattle, Wash, | A. D, CHARLTON, A. G. P. A., Portland, Ore. East Easily Spared | A chronie dyspeptic was stay- | | ing with a friend and when the | two were out for a walk one | morning, he said to his host | . “I took a couple of tablespoon- ; fuls of salt water from ‘the sea | yesterday, and thought I derived benefit from ft | | | lnas n day | Doctor (a week later) —N { wT strictly ‘to only he is four w with his allowane eee Lively Cheese | How did you find the Stilton States. eks in advance October 31, etc, call @n or write | I sent you?” Ast., “Find it? We didn't find it! | | As soon as ever my wife's back | Was turned it jumped from the pantry shelf and ran down the garden, out of the gate and was last seen chasing a frightened Z Ae dog down the road.”—London Mail. | cause orders | She writes | hard * Paverertt f/everetr! *7/ you've smePLy | \ Got To cer vue! is GETTING GOLD! HASN'T HAO “MY, MY,” SAYS Di, “BUT THINGS LOOK BLUE; WHAT ARE THE MOVIES COMING T0?” EV'S ROUGH; GOOD STUFF WHEN IN A - BUT WIFE WON'T : STAND FOR ANY BLUFF “1 HAVON'T ( HAD MY SLeGP | out YeT. YouR SLEEP our, CHT co TO BE0 ATA DECENT HouR! POST GUARD ON FLAGLER GUNS TOWNS) ha commanding PORT D, June 1.—Be- been issued by officer at Fort the | Flagler to allow no one to visit the batteries without special permit, the wildest rumors have been set afoot ne rumor has {t that a discovery has been made that Fort Worden had been photographed {n detall by foreign spies Another rumor is that an attempt to put four guns, including a big siege gun, out of commission at Fort Flagler, has been unearthed Extra guards placed on duty, Now COT DOWN STAIRS while ordinarily of no special signif: | feance, at this time of war talk tend to widen the imaginations of curbstone m iittarist MILITIA ON GUARD 1D, Okla, B June 1.—Following |the deportation of 300 harvesters who threatened food raide unless the city provided them with pro- visions, Enid today was patrolled by | militiamen Two hundred other men who par. ticipated in the threatened riots will be deported today. | Frye & Co. arkets Wednesday Specials: 5 cans Wild 25c Choice Steer 18¢ elf anc DS 15c tie Chops Choice Steer _ Pot Roast, Ib.... Choice Veal 15¢ Catintoee Adc Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp. Anchor Brand 2 signifies purity and quality. ops Open Until 6:20 9. M. IF YOU ARE SLOW About Buying Now, You Lose the Profit Between Regular and Our CLOSE-OUT Prices $1.80 Roll 36-inch 2-Inch Mesh Galvanized Poultry Wire . $2.40 Roll 48-Inc ° $3.00 Roll 60-inch Same . $3.60 Roll 72-Inch Same There are also several lowered prices. - $1.13 $1.50 $1.88 - $2.25 broken rolls at $4.95 Roll of 36-Inch 1-Inch Mesh Gaivan- ized Poultry Wire .. $6.60 Roll of 48-Inch 1- 45 48-Inch Long 5! 2x! 10¢ Slotted Mixing or B 15c Pair Leather Goggies $1.50 Single Sliding Door Lock . $3.88 ich Mesh Galvanized Poultry Wire . Blade Lady's or Junior Shovel ting Spoon . 3c 2\g-Inch Corbin Till or Drawer Lock . 15¢ Chef Heavy Egg and Cake Turner .. A Visit to Store or a Look Over Close. Out Price Sheet Offers Big Opportunities for Wise Investments This Ad and 15c Will Pay for Sharpening 10 Durham Duplex or One Dozen Other Safety Razor Biades Now SPINNING’S CASH STORE 14156-1417 Fourth Av. Says Says Akoz Relieved Her of Long Suffering When All Else Failed Mrs. Davis, 472 Yamhill Street, Uses Remedy for Stomach Trouble and Catarth. One of Portland's residents {s Mrs, Sarah Davis, residing at 472 Yamhill st, For many years she has been a suf- ferer from catarrh and stomach pioneer trouble Her friends have been greatly pleased at the improve- ment of her condition, which she says has n brought about by the use of Akoz, the California medicinal wonderful mineral, “For 15 years I suffered from stomach trouble and catarrh, My stomach trouble was so bad that I don’t believe a person could be any worse. All the dis- agreeable and painful symptoms were to be found in my case. The catarrh made life all the more to bear, I have taken all kinds of medicines, but never found anything to give me relief until I took Akor “Three months of Akoz taken in ternally has almost entirely cor-| stomach, li kidney and bladder rected my stomach trouble, So trouble, catarrh and other ailments. gréat was the improvement that|For sale at all leading drug stores, I started on tho treatment for ca tarrh and this ailment is almost| had regarding this advertisement. Mrs. Sarah Davis cured, I am so pleased with the results I have obtained from Akos that I am convinced that a little longer treatment will cure me com pletely and I shall continue with the remedy.” Akoz has proven effective in thousands of cases of rheumatisn, where further information may ba 3 ‘ ‘ | | 1 ‘ : : 1 . i

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