The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 13, 1917, Page 4

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Member of the witehed Patty The Seattle Star - MORE THAN 60,000 COPIES SOLD DAILY. Wise Old Terauchi Premier Terauchi is a fire-eating Jap at heart in his skull for patriotic when he “L observe with no little misgivings that the beautiful life of simplicity in the countryside is in danger of being disturbed by the increasing inva of vain and flippant customs and manners What ails the Japs is war munitions prosperity . but shows that he has room sense, SAVS: sion Industrially and finan- cially, Japan is convalescent from the war with Russia. Probably for the first time, the Japanese people are not thinking so much about the glory of war and national expansion as about the glory of money-making, and when this psychological change comes to a people that never has had much, the simple country life usually has to take a back seat while folks go to town to “blow the Ives in’ on the vanities and flippan- cies. A transfer of popular sentiment from the field of glory to the field of 25 per cent profit, naturally causes misgivings to old warriors like Terauchi and his class. When the five per cent of Japan’s aristocracies again call on the common folk to fight, they may find said common folk too fat and happy to do it with the old spirit More than one great natic Simplicity of the country life has petered out because the folks abandoned and went in for the vanities and flippancies, Lake Washing: 2 higher in January than in December, ee States engineer One ‘BLAME THE UMPIRE! thing, you can't hiashel on the middleman, any ‘way. SAN FRAN( ‘O, Fett Rn eball team after play " Extraordi Document wtth UT of Washin tame a most extra a | Cees a Pl ment yesterday. Jt was penned by Charles | noted Ml. It was the ‘article, appearing in The Star, wh icted the end of the great war 90 days if the United es and Germany declare war As Russell himself says, this may sound far-fetched at first mention, but his article nevertheless backed WHAT IS GOING by the usual strength of | force of argument. R AND AUSTRI ‘sell Ws a student, who is whatever ect } My discusses, and from any viewpoint, reade f The 8 given ample food for thought by Russel article No craven-hearted man was ever fit to be a citizen Courage is the source of patriotism—Beecher. 's $1,600,000 Brainstorm [7 HEN Councilman Dale and his friends propose to that you send him back to the council as a | MEAT, POULTRY, GAME |SHIPPED AS “CEMENT” q Sasen Arbeiter Zeltung tells “business engine Baumers. an ” ask them to explain that $1,600,000 deal which he rw induced by a ent of to put over in the Seattle, Renton & Southern case bgp ggg Ts «ayy ape little white elephant on their hands for the next 25) them aroused the station master’s suspicion, and it was opened. It was found to be filled with meat, | poultry and game, as were the re barrels of ‘cement.’ then learned that the baker had been making Germany, you're in Dutch! “Samaritan” One Better Story of the Good Samaritan is one of the greatest classics | master these imports for the account of a Wer written. Everybody knows it. And everybody belleves ite| Very highly placed personage at ings the Al Chapelle military kom | Hare are the chief points in this wonderfully human story of what) mandantur “ip cp li te ally sentenced to nine months’ {m ye Samaritan did: fe Bcc eot but concerning the First, he made a “survey.” -_——, | As Told by the Newspapers We Get From the Teutonic Empires What kind of “business” is it, you should ask Dale, to| ment consigned from St veld in| $1,600,000 for a $700,000 car line? If Dale's proposition be land = hs 96 wad * Alx > neil he | aChapelle. hen the barrels ar been accepted, Seattle taxpayers would have had the)‘ U*hl Prhemnctiecdier is oar STAR—TUESDAY, FEB. 13, 1917, a KILLED BY THE NEXT TIME You — BREAK IT GENTLY ON IN GERMANY A-HUNGARY! j— amined. Thin exchange ts betng created in the form of a company, the larger part of the shares of whi will be held the Austro-H: arian government, and the reat by private tndtvid be a board of di half of w will be representatives of the gov ernment and the other half elected | by the private members of the con-| » wil cern, Its capital will be about $200,000. CONSTANTINOPLE FULL OF GERMAN ADVISERS Prof. Vamberg, who has been tf Constantinople founding a “broth- | erhood-tn. writes to the Budapest Az Ujeng that the) circles today guiding the destinies of the Ottoman empire are doing all they to we nize Turkey ery ministry ite German he says. Elght young Ger man professors have been appoint ), The Priest and the Levite passed by on the other side. The Sam-|!!sh military official, nothing oa at the University of Constantt ar} came where the wounded traveler had been left by the band | *"'° he maces. jnople. The principal difficulty ts ‘Tobbers on Jericho road, to get the facts | CHILOREN WORKED TEN the language. They read their leo | Becond, he was “moved with compassion.” HOURS FOR & CENTS tures in Turkish from a translation, He didn't come merely to get the “data” in the case—he put! The Sehw he Tagwacht pub| but the munciation Is awful into the task ltshee an expose of conditions in 4) Their succes small Third, he helped the traveler. Pelee ns ee ee ene greatly respect He bound up his wounds, set him upon his own beast, brought him | "OCA" ‘airing beac [the German pre they feel an inn, paid his bill, and told the keeper that if the sick man needed |!)0)Gl im work reauiring = heavy | out ite ‘ s ng else, to see that he got it, and the Samarttan would make ft) /)))) 08 © george Dra . tect | TBs wor right. ae ha y deabaden man hers extremely difficult And here you have an outline of what should be done today in meet The Fa ro Tax Pros inflexibilit s the verry the social needs of the times Wickit: “eae ton aes atk day in ro. | Sntithests te urkish way of But there's one thing else—something that a thousand “Good) orn for a wage of & conte thinking and feeling, Vamberg re tans,” working individually, can never do: THE “JERICHO DADS” MUST BE CLEARED OF THIEVES AND ROBBERS Peden aid - — ‘This will do away with the necessity of caring for “wounded trav a ae Dae Pe . ge ! ! —whether they have been wounded by industrial, social or polit- hao 4 oy ; re prs PS 4 4 4 And this is a job that requires the combined efforts of all. The rob- |" rae nerd are strong and many—AND THEY'RE ORGANIZED pomp The rest of us need to get together—and when we do it w WE cecetinuay dn. adie, . . od-night” to the robber bands on al! “Jericho roads felbed -cn eb. 1 Brnag oh 5 7 : mark for the zentner, encoura Dental Study club, opening free clinic here, is seeking the farmers to kee back th cavities. If vacuums will do, why not try some of our | stocks until that time. In the mat ter o corn ne armers were of. mium for suppl prompt de in conseque ery, and the President Rhodes of the Commercial Club telephones jhas not come to very much below here from New York for 5,000 more members. It’s a | expectations long lane that may have no telephone, but Seattle Rhodes ou oane WORKING SERB COPPER MINES are more up to date. . cematee oi ne re Teoma Kruna r these det t A California organizer is here to get up a church | gorpj er mines which Bul federation on the trail of vice. With Doc Matthews in | garians are now operating own import iders? | “The two largest of the copper ‘3 Sas laa ont |mines at Majdanpek and Per are situated in the part of Serpia which G. A. R. ladies are against using the American flag § R . in occupied by the Bulgars; the dat for advertising purposes. So should every American be. [jy output of each of these two " inlets mines is three truck loads of pure! Perhaps there was a reason for coming out of Mexico! [copper nd two truck loads of ma me STAND BY THE PRESIDENT! jexplosives which was formenly im | ported from An Effective Laxative seine ba th, care an F there s lead to be found in Serbia For Growing Children. 0s" 000 sium | hundred of is found Rreg iIphuret of lead at Razanj, Rudnik well a at at Crveni where there Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin} Highly Recommended as ae a Family Remedy \ | VIENNA GOING OUT FoR : TRADE OF BALKANS ) In children the slightest irregu The Commercial bank of Vienna Jarity of the bowels has a tendency intends to establish a special Ba | to disturb the entire digestive sys- an exchange {n Vienna and Buda pe ‘ pest, says a Vienna dispatch to the | tem, and unless promptly remedied |Cologne Volkazettnne Tt I8 to . invites serious illness. The expe [ tlenced mother knows that by train- » Frank . pares [form a center for the Importation ing her children to regularity in Teo Wes ; EY Jot all raw materials coming from | this respect, and when occasion £0 We fand pe Balkans and the near Kast; to arises administering «a mild laxa eA N Pia for ood tive, she will have little need for Strongest constitu trannceee te and ‘sold in }) the doctor's services lt Bata acd nA portation to Mrs. Io Weigand, 2261 Central] Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin can|and, ttnall. te arose te ar Bast i ave. N. 8. Pittsburg, whose) be obtained at any drug store for| or tourists into the dng ie nes | two boys, Frank and Joseph, are| fifty cents, and should have a place| A lases geod 0: ! aa ; monarchy j Shown in the illustration, writes|in every home, It will save many|eq to the ‘chine UT be attach yp that whe has found Dr. Caldwell’s|times its cost in lessened doctor| waren will, ha roth che | Syrup Pepsin a most effective lax-| bills and maintain the health of the Hace ; and ex ative, not only for the children, but|entire family. To avoid imitations oe! for herself, and that whe will al-|and ineffective substitutes be sure HO PILLS FOR B we, Ways keep it in the house to use|to get Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin OYS : when needed Dr Caldwell's See that a facsimile of Dr. Cald e Syrup Pepsin is a combination of we ignature and his portrait ap ALEM. Ore Feb. 1 press e simple laxative herbs with pepsin| pear on the yellow carton in wh ettes must not be sold to or smoled ee, that acts easily and naturally, with the bottle packed A trial bot-| b nor according to ; Out griping or other pain or discom-| tle, free of charge, can be obtained, mise bill which {4 before the : fort. \t is pleasant to the taste, so; by writing to Dr. W. 1. Caldwell,| senate today, It vAR Das ad rsh that children like it, and is equally|455 Washington St., Monticello, fl | house late yesterday SSC WUE NA ele Wo RN }t Lead |Every Particle of Dandruff Disappears and Hair Stops Coming Out Draw a Moist Cloth Through Hair and Double Its Beauty at Once our hair bec | fut abundant soft, lustrous and young girl's after a omen light, wavy. and appears as beautiful as hn “Danderine hb |cleanse.” Just try this—moisten 4 loth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. | This will cleanse the hair of dust | dirt and excessive oll and in just a | few moments you have doubled the auty of your hair Resides beautifying once, Danderine the hair dissolves at | every | particle of dandruff; cleanses, puri- | fles and invigorates the sealp, for. | ever stopping itching and falling what will please you most be after a few weeks’ use you 1 actually see new haif—fine and downy at first—yes but really pew hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pret |ty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any druggist or | toilet counter, and just try it Save your hair! Beautify it! You will say this was the you eve best 25 cents ent Thoroughness Characte « our meth | every transaction, and tomera are accorded every cou ness Judgment 4 with sound busi 0 # Vaid on Savings Ace: nate k 1 Chee fled Are Peoples Savings Bank ND AYE. AND a WS {Edi Editor’ | supporting Gold fillings PAGE 4 MRS. SMITH Your & HUSBAND HAS JUST BEEN A STRE er CAR HAVe ANY NEWS UIK@ THAT, BREAK (tT GENTLY ie 1] by A MARKETS ENOUGH Editor The Star you my opinion of the proposition to establish a new market to be run by the clty Iam very much againat this We now have many more markets than We have, or ever can expect to have, use for. Many of the people are not ex ceedingly anxious to have the mon ey they pay fn tares go toward an institution which Will not benefit them fn any way Do we want the market to final- ly take the place of the butcher the baker, the grocer, or any retail dealer? I certainly do not and I also feel there are many others of the same opinion HAROLD NICKERSON, The Star Is glad to receive arguments on the proposed municipal market, for which $600,000 bonds are to be voted. State your opinion—either for or against the proposition. But keep the letter within 200 words.—Editor, BAD COLD? TAKE “CASCARETS’ FOR BOWELS TONIGHT They're Fine! Liven Your) Liver and Bowels and Clear Your Head. No Headache, Sour Stomach, Bad Cold or Constipa- tion by Morning. Get a 10-cent box Colde—whether in the head or any part of the body—are quickly overcome by urging the liver action and keeping the bowels tne of poison. Take Cascareta tonight and you will wake up with a clear| roe and your cold will ascareta work while ter cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undi gested food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels Remember the quickest way to get rid of colds is one or two Cas. arets at night to cleanse the sys Get a 10-cent box at any drog tore. Don't forget the children. They relish this Candy Cathartic id it is often all that is needed to drive a cold from their little systems ‘REAL PAINLESS — DENTISTS you sleap: tn order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest and strongest plate known, does not cover the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years Gold crown .... $3.00 $15 net of teeth (whalebone) 88.00 | $10 set of teeth $5.00 Bridge work, per tooth, rl White crowns Silver fillings Platina fillings All work guaranteed for 15 years, Have tmpression taken in the morn- ing and get teeth same day, xam- ation and advice free, See Samples of Our due Work. We Sta: Test of Time. } th Most of our present patronage te recommended by our early custo: ers, whose work ‘# atill giving good rativfaction. Aak our customers whe have tested our work Whe to our office, be sure you @ right place. Bring this ad OHI Cut - Rate Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY ST, Op oveite Fraser-Patersen Ca, s Mail flat her sw I wish to give | be gone. | By Juliet W. Tompkins “we Ssseees PeYTTITITIIIII aa "ie ger | looked though tere (Continued From Our Last | put the ease ar 1 Mr ent ent te have A I have en to. a and began composing lette that perhaps be ' arteral a Chloe watehed her in achir and ave © ou Tt lp. gone to bed he tood 2:3 ou can go on Wit ( help” © begged ‘0 loo! ghtene “ 1 h Just lea « mear rt ca ‘ now and Chloe obe We ' and 1oe Hour In a ent oune “ ¢ reward I Mrs, Gage took the paper and read | time, dear. anc am tired the brief paragra thru, “OM! pre 1 | would save your| ought to go ba andmarh once a father ff ou t I can't—well Me, Har will, pale ker name * ° © qua may be joesn't matter so much | yy, 4a few ater, contained ‘ presentation ° *° ax I thought. We've both done ourlng mention of Sabra, Mra. Gagg . interest now attaches | pest wns distressed at the mews; wae ag The patronizing phrase Another thing,” she went on,| fighting courage seemed to be fell on her like buffet under ou. have given yourself very ve who wal which shrank with bewildered | faithfully to our Httle boy, but ft pair a long time she #at!is time that you had a chance to! will darn oot aa facing and, back of m,| develop your own life, a Sabra a & nev the hands of a new | and Ralston have Rawly will have ; - EB ly r= Kenere Vhen ¢ rose, her! money now to he ou, if you need 4 : a martia » seemed shaken. It] jr y iaekran tea’ ae ont for the best. It ts only ys now to Ralston’s play, an canta ike sie kee my grandchild will be that y change the whole | who crept up the stairs to bed for me than racing|#"d that may chang h |family status | ae see e 1 am going to re) °*" ; CHAPTER VI lam going| The night of the opening arrived, The Play Falls ignations now.” |The play had been given a hasty ge set out on her cam Chloe start to| trial out of town 4 Ralston had > the next morning; but or a visit to her er's|come back strained, preoccupigd had led so many forlorn t as whe closed the door|too nervous to be asked quest! hopes to victor) before © was kharply called. Mr v enough—as well as you she started. Son ing w gone was on her staring at} could expect with that class of@ out of her fighting power. The old paper. jaudience.” was all he would say. jpationt diligence wan there; she Where's a? Find Sabra,”| ‘The had been widely ad | waited hours in outer offices, inter-| she comm adding, as Chlo¢|yertised, and the house was full 9 |vlewed every city official who| did not move, “Mr. Har, Lind-|tp a seat well to the front Chloe a could be caught, sent out a stream | sley died a few hours ago saw Mrs. Carta and tried te of letters to the press and to in-| Sabra, summoned from upstairs, smile at her, but the lovely lady, fluential friends; but the swing of| took the news much more calmly pale, would not lift her eyes, her enthusiasm had fallen. She I have been to see him and re i pranenttts Donald Cartaret came ta plodded forth, a broken old soldier,| ported progress along, 41d not Join her, apparently pre faithful to the last, seeing only that | mother,” she exclaimed. “He has he must flight, not that she must, been intensely intere in the rs of Sereno © win we He won't leave the work u t the box to oe One morning she set out as| provided for, you may be sure of ‘ and ire'< usual, but in @ fow minutes she/ that and a ted under the stim-— slowly came back. Chloe ran down| “Some way, with the statue go- In spite ot heraclt, Cle to the door, an alarmed question |ing, I feel as if anything might] watched for Alex, but tho she soom put Mra. Gage was not| happen,” Mrs, Gage sald, in apol pire lie g . Surry i _|ogy for her faintheartedness. “It htsb Wan nat wits cea no—I am all right,”|{s probably as you say. And, if] ®t qi ce present that aie 1 sat down in bonnet|{t {sn't, Rawly will have money] \iqoring rag te rye ® a8 tho thinking out|from the play. And there the S other said, “Fhae jsome new and absorbing blem.|fund. 1 don't think we could use a’ One i it re perhaps I have done all|it better than in furthering your| ning, the oti can, Toto,” she began at last. “I | work, 8 sxe: Pare, aera {could wee them all over again; but! “That's so-—the fu "Sabra ra 9 th were bored. One said, is gol " but the other LEMON ADE’S FABLES IN SLANG Gump was the official Wise Guy of the little Burg of Po-| In Raz Wilson's Tonsorial Parlor Henry was the Oracle of Wis- There was Nothing Hen knew Henry, everything was All Wrong. And Nobody could fix it but Hen. Hen fought more War Battles beside the Stove in the General Store than Gen. Joffre has ever seen. . lazarius Smith was a Long and Lanky Specimen. Henry dunk. dom. Ruster. STAR BEAMS BY E. D. K. | Author of “If You Can't Smile, Giggle.” Lax had a Snag Tooth, chewed Granger Twist and could spit Farther Between his Teeth than Old Man Amos Hill. | Much, but folks sald he generally Got There. cast over every blast of failure (Continued in Our Next Issue) ACTRESS TELLS SECRI |A Well-Known Actress Tells She Darkened Her Gray Hair With a Simple Home- Made Mixture. scene the cold Miss Blanche Rose, a well-knowa actress, who darkened her gray hair with a simple preparation which she mixed at home, in a recent inter view at Chicago, IIL, made the fok lowing statement: “Any lady or gentleman can darken their gray hair and make it soft and glossy with thi mple recipe, which they can mix at home. To a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Compound and %& nothing about. According to O, Boy, Hen was THERD! He was a He Never said He Never fought a battle, jand Claimed he didn't know anything much. Running the Country! of giycerine. These ingredients } Wasn't in his Line. can be bought at any drug store at di very little cost. Apply to the hair Ten years later. twice a week until it becomes the Lesarias Smith has Donated the New Library for tne thriving|Tequired shade. This will make # little Town of Podunk Kale Henry Gump still know Mor | Home the Bacon YES, WHY NOT MT. DALE? Georg, Cottertll suggests the name of Lincoln {f Rainter fs no longer to designate the mountain |Clarence Bagley | Stevens, after | governor Washington's first Suffering cata, if it's to be named | The on Ojafter a really why not] | Cafeteria Alles Da great man, o1D you KNOW— After all, the world is place unless your hat blows off. And then again, “poetry of motion” ip the kind that’s al | ways going from one editor to another. No matter how good a jumper you are, and even with a pair of stilts, it's some job to hurdle a tring of lies MONEY We don't mind how much money talke bat bow we hate to hear it air "Ye Saxeen: & spoonful LIN—The legal and tit éiay acaiilve of Stamboul un iversity have named the kaiser as a candidate for the Nobel peace prize, Like put ting a brewer at the head of a flock of prohibition advocates SPEAKING OF THE KAISER | This kaiser stuff, about the| more the merrier, makes us think | of the wolf who was pretty well | ginned and was nh a crowded wet sock He wanted now he hanging on a strap | itney chariot like a feelin wa much mean in the was hard-boiled and eater, Nobody paid any at-| tention to him it made Kid Martini peeved yowled +4 lick any fathead car and every body car to raw meat can in the Nobody looked up from the Then he was mad “1 ean lick any mutt in the city!” want | | Not a chirp from the traction patrons, Then he got savage “Hey!! | can lick anybody in the! county!!!" Finally a bundle moved on a seat and & little egg crawled out from | under it, came up the aisle, pulled his fist back and let it bump off} the foremost projection on the stew's mug Down went kissed terra mashed potato Now what shrimp, The opened ale firma the and some hound piped chunk on the at the runt gladiator and buzzed “Hic, | guess | covered too much territory.” 8 it should be) He still has the Snag Tooth and looks like a Cross herobon the Village Gossip and a Barkeep. all-about-everything, and at latest reports j still has the old-time dexterity in Hopping Freights. . | A Long Tongue never Runneth to the Store and Bringeth «ana WHAT HAS BECOME sray-haired person look 20 years younger. It makes the hair soft and glossy, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off.”—Advertise | ment. But he has Scads of VERS LIBRE Here's to the lad who's there wit! a laugh That's | Real But. to this guy, we don't give | much who laughs, then asks for a touch v B PHYSICAL HEALTH? rfect health is a blessing far e all other gifts. If yc it, I venture to say have Perfect Teeth “Mouth and >or- are tion of the ure to give ct cause of human er single cause, ehinson, M. D. GUARANTRE y work to be the I know it Dentist to no matter how for any work you pay High-class Painless Dentistry at reasonable prices has bee> gm aim for 26 years 22-karat Crowns Rridgew per tooth to $10.00 to 815.00 delay {ts dan- do better 85.00 85.00 estimates free. PAINLESS AUSTIN ian THE OLD FASHIONED KID WHO USED TO GET ALL DRESSED UP AND L TO TRE FoLKs Yauco L THEIR FRIENOS ABOUT THE BEST Ti THATS EXACTLY THE KIND OF TOBACCO PM WANTING (ve TRIED ALL OF L “EM. ALITTLE CHEW OF WB CUT SATISFIES AND LASTS, WITH LESS GRINDING AND LESST WB Is RICH TOBACCO, YOU TAKE A LARGE CHEW OR GRIND ON IT, You MAY ME YOO-- VM TIRED OF ORDINARY) TOBACCO. U SPITTING WHEN you gentlemen get together at your lodge meetings, somebody is aed sure to start the little pouch of W-B CUT up the line for his brothers. It’s conducive to brotherly feeling. ‘There is gratitude for the rich tobacco that makes a little nibble go so far and for the touch of salt that pe is out the tobacco satisfaction without so much jaw wor! Made by WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, 50 Union Square, New York City

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