The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 16, 1917, Page 3

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———-The Liberty Leads La -UNTIL WEDNES by Merit Succeeds— ‘ >| DAY NIGHT ONLY ! LOUISE and sea also to clothe acking in this tter supp our people for whom the 1 particularly b gallant fellows under arms can no South to plant poet | i eq the armies with which we show their m in ‘ are co-operating in Europe, and tol better or more neing Ww 4 | keep the looms and manufactories|than by rests » great tempta | there in raw ma coal toltion of the p nt price of cotton} a * | keep the fires going in ships at/and helping, helping upon a great ha | sea and fn the furnaces of hundreds|ycale to feed the nation and the! of factories across the sea; stee!| peoples everywhere who are fighting Is cast as Honore Zoni: Parisian a h to make arms and liberties and for our own beauty and adventuress. Time, the ammunit oth here and there tety of r will be present. The story revolves around rails for worn-out railways back of!the visible measure of thelr com a single chapter in her life—but t f ® f ta; lo ves and | pre! y | with pages teeming with the un- ing stocks to Place of} 1 ueual, the dramatic and romantic. those every day foing to pleces ates and the gover soft Verily, the author dipped deep his es, horses, cattic for labor and/peveral states stand dy to ¢o- pen in the red ink of life and pas for military service; everything operate. They will do everything lon when he wrote: with which the » of England | possible to asaist farmers in secur Sweetheart ofthe Doomed Sunday's throngs were enthusl- astic in their praise of the story, star and staging—and, frankly, we are, tool! Mister | LONESOME LUKE IN TIN-CAN ALLEY, in two reels, ties the tin can to gloom. Admission 15¢, Children 5c | | y Firet at Pike Continuous 11 to 11 PATRIOT NEEDS WORK Carman Burr left a job as hort! jeulturist in Eastern Washington to }come to Seattle and join the —— |artillery. That branch of the mf tia hasn't been called to federal service yet, so Burr needs work iid y can help him, call Kenwood 1917 Demonstrators $500 and Up Good mystery stories are a rarity. | ‘That's why “The Blind Man's Eyes” fs worth reading. 88 Then read “The which starts tn| Like mystery? Blind Man's Eyes The Star today GRANDMOTHER KNEW There Was Nothit Nothing So Good for Congestion and Colds as Mustard But the old-fashioned mustards plaster burned and blistered while at acted. Get the help that mustard plasters gave, without the plaster and without the blister! Musterole does it. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It is scientifically pre- pared, so that it works wonders, We have a few dem- onstrating cars, slightly used, at exceptional yet does not blister the tender skin. prices and terms. Just massage Musterole in with the finger-tips gently. See how — quickly it brings relief—how speed- ily the pain disappears. Use Musterole for sore throat brorichitis, tonsilitis, croup, neck, asthma, neuralgia, he tion, pleurisy, rhet lus bago, pains and aches of back $, sprains, sore chilblains, frosted colds of the chest. Investigate Overland Pecific, Inc. 1022 E. Pike St. Phone East 660, 7 Always look for the famous “Good Luck” Seal, 4, on both ends of every package of Biscuits you buy. SWASTIKA BiscuITS are a nutritious food in a highly concen- trated form. The ‘‘Good Lue Seal is surety of Biscuit Purity,. Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. 5 factories, must b ro and there phall war! |lifie and more e ¢T| ranted manipulation ation’s | and that they m be more eco | food supply by handle nomically managed and better/it on its way to the consumer, This ¢ service will of right and of neces ality be excused from that service assigned to the fundamental * and under fire Appeals to Farmers BY PESHENT take the liberty, therefore, of this word to the farmers o o¢ ntry, and to all who wor \¢ “ —<-@/ on the farms: The supreme need | Continued From Page 1. |) of our own nation und of the na @/tlons with which we are cooperat i} t nk ie an abundance of supplic uture peace and security of [iid eapect of foodstuffs, The the world. To do this great rtance of an adequate foo thing worthily and successfully aahelatio San thn etanen we must devote ourselves to $siy 1 : me rlativ Withe the service without regard to nid eG yp ys a gibt ion tae profit or material advantage at th peoples ne t war, ( and with an energy and intelll whole great enterprise upon wh | gence that will rise to the level | 4 have embarked will break dow | of the enterprise itself. We a. sil, The world’s food reserve | must realize to the full how |.) ‘ | are low, Notonly during the present great the task Ie and how | emergency, but for some time a many things, how many kinds |Deace shail have come, both and elements of capacity and | own people and a large proj service and self-sacrifice it in | Or tne people « Darep must rely volves. Jupon harvests in Amert Uy These, then, are the things welthe farmers of this coun » and do well, t 7 in large measure, rests the n © things withou 1 mer © war and the fate of the fighting would be fraltiess We must supply at ant food Asks Ample Labor Army ow € nd for « nies May the nation not count our seamen hot on it also them to omit tep that will for a large part of nations with | crease the production of their land whom we ha sade common! that will bring about the most ¢ ca in Ww port and fectual co-operat! nth \ « all be fight istribution of thelr food produc | S. Must Supply World time {a short, It is of the me We must supply by the|imperative importance that every-| hundreds our shipyards tol/thing possible be done and @ carry to the other side of the sea,|{mmediately to make sure of lar | submarines or no submart hat | harvests 1 call upon young m will every day be needed th and | and alike and upon the able abundant materts t of our! podle »y8 of the land to accer fields and our mines and our fac|and act upon this duty—to torfes with which not only to clothe| hosts to the farms and make cer and equip our own forces on lar n t no pains and no labor is and Franc and Russia/ing an adequate supply of seed, an have wu themselves,| adequate force of laborers when but cannot now af they are most needed at harve materials or the 6, and the means of exped make. shipments of fertilizers and Must Produce More as well as tho It is evident to every th when harves man that our Industrie trade shall be « in shipyards, tn the mine an it is pos » make | STAR—MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1917. \that shelters u: [he is a very poor American citizen PAGE 3 Cynthia Grey’s CARRY BOATS a Please tell me if the battle ships carry lifeboats, and if not why? ALR A.—Kvery battles! equipped 1th small boats enough to reseur the men in an emergence The uren't called tho, A r they are by gasoline r stean INSTRUCT THEM Q.—Will you please tell me if you think boys and girls should play to gether on the school ground without Ider people to watch them? M. 8. A.A segregation of nee not idea of protecting yo boy and girls, It is a well known fact that a number of young peo e from the path of virtuc ' Many me ® their daughter oung men up to they leave school, The end world and ex same moth: their g t into the working their ty (ignorance) t protect then Parents, in t your eh from earliest hood, trust , and make them responsible for heir own actions, Boys and girls hould associate fre yhood Then when they must m 6 im the great world ax men and women th il stand on an equal footing NURSE WRITES Oear Mise Grey: In answer te A Reader's” question in Fri day night's paper as to why the working class of a country Is al ways forced to join the fighting. ‘when we don't even own the roof ” is that the work ing classes are a pack of fools who haven't even enough sense to know which way to point the gun which | 8 forced into their hands REO CROSS NURGE. | FARMER WRITES Dear Miss Grey: In answer to one who gna himecif “A Read | would like to say to him that and Is not entitied to own even the roof that shelters him, where the Stars and Stripes are flying. Don’t you suppose that fellews like Teddy Roosevelt own thelr own homes and have wealth enough without going to war, if it were not for the honor of our cun country and the flag the Germans would be glad to surround, too. United States of America doesn't want to make soldiers out of men like you. You had better ask some friends of youre—if you have any—| to flash the 8. O. &., is In bad shape and you 8 your heart need | adapted to the particular require-|iy our opportunity to demonstrate ments of our task than they have / ihe icleney of the great demoo been, and what I want to say !®/racy and we shall not fall short that the men and the women who| of jt devote their thought and their on ergy to these things will be serv Nation: Watehes Middiemen | ing the country and conducting the| | This. let me say to the middle | fight for peace and freedom just as|™en of ey bgp + ow ~¢ ; oe ut et lare handling our foodstuffs or our truly and just as effectively as the men on the Dattlefields or in the/T®¥ materials of manufacture or trenches. The industrial forces of the products of our mille and fac the country, men and women alike,|(ories: The eyes of the country | will be a great national, a gr Ii be especially upon you. industrial service army—a notable |!* Your opportunity for si efficient and disinterested. | and honored host engaged in the| vice vice of the nation and the world,| The Country expects y it ex the efficient friends and saviors | pects all others, to forego unusual * a . The to organize and expedite fe Hable to milf nd, but espe of food, with ————.|an eye to the s © you are ren jdering and tp the spirit of those -f Joy T0 who enlist in the ranks, for thelr| confidently expect you to deserve jand win the « dence of people of Tie ry sort and ¢ ation people, not for themselves, I shal! To the men who run the rallways| fof the country, whether th be} pe managers or operative © | Use “Tiz” for Aching, Burn-|jot ms say that the salle the arteries of the nation’s | at upon them rests the ! responsibility of seeing to it that ing, Puffed-up Feet and Corns or Callouses. so arteries suffer no obstruction 1") Soret 1 Use TZ ny kind, no tency or slackened power, To the n ant | Every Ti Aay "net Tesate?” Small let me suggest the motto, ark \j profits and quick service’; and to the shipbuilder the thonght that the © of the war depends upon him The food and the war suppl across the seas, n ny ships are sent to t bottom. The places of those that go down must be 1 and st m | 6 Tot ner let me plied at o say that stands where the far mer does: The work of the world| waits on him, If he slackens or} d-bye, sore feet, burning feet armies and statesmen are wollen feet, tender feet, tired feet He also 1s enlisted in the Good-bye, corns, callouses, bun-| reat service army. The manufac s and raw spots, No more shoe| turer does not need to be t 1} ess, no more Hmping with]! that the nation looks to him pain or drawing up your face in| to speed and perfect every process; | agony. “Tiz” is magical, acts right} and I want only to remind his em ft, “Tix draws out all the poison-| ployes that their service fs abso-| # extidations which puff up the|lut ndispensable and is counted | ot. Use “Tiz” and wear smaller|on by every man who loves the| hoes. Use “Tix” and forget your|country and its liberties foot misery, Ab! how comfortable} Economy In the Home | ur feet feel “hae Get a 25-cent box of “Tis” now| _[4t mo suggest, also, that every Pipe cod gyre ‘or. department|On® Who creates or cultivates a store. Don't. wuffer, Hate. good |&&Fdon helps and helps gre ag feet, glad feet, feet that never| Solve the problem of the feeding of aswell, never hurt, never get tired,|tho nations; and that every house-| A rs foot comfort guaranteed or| Wife who practices strict economy | puts herself in the ranks of those| money refunded. who serve t nation. This fs the time for America to correct her un pardona fault of wastefulness and extravagance, Let ev man and every woman assume duty Jof careful, provident use and ex penditure as a public duty, as a dictate of patriotism which no one can now expect ever to be excused or forgiven for ignoring. In the hope that this statement of the needs of the nation and of the world in this hour of supreme crisis may stimulate those to whom {t comes and remind all who ni reminder of the solemn duties of a time such as the world has never I beg that all edit ywhere will seen before. ors and publishers give as prominent publication and wide circulation ag possib this appeal. TI venture to suge also, to all advertising agencies that’ they would perhaps render a very substantial and timely service ever as ie” | to the country ff they would give }it widespread repetition. And I hope that clergymen will not think | the theme of ft an unworthy or in appropriate subject of comment and }homily from their pulpit 1 preme test of the nation has ¢ We must all speak, act d serve together WOODROW WILSON, was physical help without delay. A POOR FARMER. CONSULT ATTORNEY Q—When |! was 16 years old, a man who boarded at our house ask ed me to ge to the show one after noon, and he was a nice Christian boy, to my knowledge. Well, | went, much to my sorrow, for he asked me to marry him, and threat ened to kill me if | didn’t I wi js0 afraid that | did not know what to do. He wouldn't let me tell the clerk my correct name, and he for. bade me to tell my parents of our marriage. Soon afterward he went away and left me, and has been gone for weeks ata time, He never has given me any money. | have had to make my living most of the time, and hie a’ it has been seven years since we were married | Now he is coming back where | am, and | want to feel free from him Will | have to get a divorce? Some people say that as long as we were not married under our real names, we do not have to have a divorce. LA If your marriage ceremony performed in accordance with law, the fact that you were mar under an assumed name does it illegal. You had better consult a reliable attorney, but I very much fear that you must obtain a divorce. Honest Dentistry Genuine Trubyte Teeth My Regular $25 net Beat Teeth s A o S10 $15 actly What I You Will Get Offer for Money if You Come to Me for Your Dental Work NTISTRY rein ‘$15 ented offer of to me your case the sre your natural arantes a perfect fit inrantee satisfaction hold an unbroken su record of over dentist I giv A emsful re aan ommand are examination or Metimate ‘ to me and } do ‘dental work Dr. H. T. Harvey me 601-602 Eitel Bullding Second and Pike fe Swirt Bvenings Drug § en Whe Open a } SATISFACTORY TERMS ALWAYS Te GROTE-RANKINCO. OTTO F. KEGEL, General Manager. Forty Small-Sized WILTON RUGS MUST BE CLOSED OUT! This assortment cor a 0! 4inch and by 634nch Wilt Rugs of the better qualities expecially desirable colors wt our stock we by To adj have re m duced all discontinued patterns and incl ome from our regular line where we were overstocke All are mar dn h lower than 27 by 64-inch, reguiar prices $6.50 Spm to $8.50, reduced to $4.25 ans $6.25 36 by 63-inch, regular prices $9.25 to $13.75, reduced to $6.75 .. $10.75 New Marquisette and Voile Curtains Special $2.25 Pr. ~ ‘it, . a Se LIVING ROOM FURNITURE Twe Carloads, Just Arrived, Now ‘ary Geaivabie fo: om us P Hy tas hod Valle cad | Ready for Your Inspection Teer tterns, trimmed with| The newest ideas in upholstered Living-Room Furie dainty filet Ince gs and inser. | ture are disp ng the recent arrivals. tions: others ha drawn work New th the utmost in materials, com- Jers. Colors are white and) geruction in design : lings 4 — Here you ing that enters into the correct price | furnishings of the om—here you can attain liv- ing room effectiveness by the expression of good taste Curtains at $3.65 the Pair and judgment, rather than by the extravagant expendi- ture of money. Are many new designs in the better grade f votle quisette, made with two rows of hand-tied, drawn-work bor rh Al insertions and . ge in att » Noral effects | Special $13 Special $25 Living Room Furniture Reproductions of Italian Periods Specially Priced Furniture that has won much favor among home fure nishers for its individuality and beauty. Built of solid oak and upholstered in verdure tapes- NEW BABY C RRI A GES tries. The savings will average one-third. A Regular $37.50 Library Tables, each.........4$25.00 For Fresh-Air Babies | Regular $60.00 Settees, special, each .......... 00 13.00 More than fifty new-style Reed | Regular $19.50 Rockers, special, each. Leeann Carriag 6 — roe’ sons the | Regular $24.00 Chairs, special, each. -$16.00 newly-arrived baby vehicles | Recular $13.50 Tables ats u ‘00 Special attention {s directed to the | Le ate pg : Tables, special, esch ty Fnamel-Finished Carriages — their | Regular $22.50 Chairs, special, each. 5.00 smooth surfaces are easily kept | Regular $25.00 Rockers, special, each..... pty & I Ne clean and bright | “ Old ivory, French gray, natural and brown, are most popular, made | with large hoods and corduroy eve | One Dollar a ee uys tains to keep baby comfortable. All | The “Free” Sewing Machine, Hoosier Kitchen Cab- inet, Frantz Premier Electric Cleaner, Hot Point Elec- tric Cleaner, Leonard Cleanable Refrigerator, Thermatic Fireless Cooker. metal parts are enameled and rust- proof. Reed Carriages are priced $19.50 to $50.00. Have Your “ Aerolux” Porch Shade Up When the f Warm Days Come} Jet in the keep out the ix” Porch Shades} light and air, but sun and pry ing eyes. Then “Aerolux” Porch ® Shades are equipped with “no-whip” attachm be left damage from flapping t, and } can down without i 1 in the wind “Aerolux” Porch Shades |} are made in various lengths, widths and colors to meet every requirement If you will call Main 7007 our men will give you an completely Victrola fits into every mood Just start estimate equipping your porch with “Aecrolux” on Anybody feel. “dancy 2" the Victrola. Did someone say Caruso? Here he is—yes, and with Melba, Farrar, Ruffo and a host of other great opera artists. Harry Lauder? The Victrola gives ou Harry's newest. Musical comedy ? Broadway's best on the Victrola. In every field of entertainment it's hades. Genuine-Hand Painted Oil, Opaque { Window Shades } the same—Victrola brings the best. Has your home a Victrola? Easy are the safest to buy terms, $15 to $400, These are made in our workrooms, mounted on GROTE-RANKIN the very best rollers SEALED RECORD SERVICE Simply phoning Main 7007 os will bring one of our men S MASTER'S to your home to measure shades quote lowest possible prices Grote- Rankin—PIKE AT F IFTH—Grote-Rankin _ and you

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