The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 17, 1917, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

24 THE GROWING GIRL irl when in her teens is pase. <S ine through a@ critical period of her life. The transition from childhood to maturity ts not always easy; consequently, in many casea| health breaks down entirely and) the girl goes tnto a decline and dies young. If she escapes this] fate, she may fall into a state of permanent {health It ts of the! wtmest importance, in order to tn-| sure normal and healthy develop} ment, that proper prégautions be taker { nothing has prove} more helpfal than the faithful use of Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Com. pound, the great woman's medicine and tonic If you are suffering from eczema, ringworm or similar itching, burn- ing, unsightly skin affection, bathe the sore places with Resingl Soap and hot water, then gently apply a little Resinol Ointment. You will probably be astonished how in- stantly the itching stops and heal- ing begins. In most cases the sick skin quickly becomes clear and healthy again, at very little cost. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap also cleat away pimples, redness, roughness aod dandruff. Sold by all Tells Rheumatism Sufferers Eat Less Meat and Take Salts Rheumatism fs easter to hvold| than to cure tes a well-known | authority. W advised to dress) warmly; keep the feet dry; avoid exposure; eat less meat, but drink plenty of good water. Rheumatism ts a direct result of eat too much meat and other) Tich foods that produce uric acid, | which is absorbed into the blood. | It ts the function of the kidneys to filter this acid from the blood and cast it out in the urine; the pores of the skin are also means of freeing the blood of this impurity. | In damp and chilly, cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do double Work, they become weak and slug- gish and fail to eliminate the uric d which keeps accumulating and ally settling in the joints and muscles, causing stiffness, sore Bess and pain called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheuma tism, get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a ta- Dlespoonful in a glass of water and ing for a week. This is said to eliminate uric acid by stimulating the kidneys to normal action, thus es the blood of these impurt- Jad Salts is inexpensive, harm- less and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithta and is used with excel- lent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism. Here you have a pleasant, effer yescent litnla-water drink, which helps overcome uric acid and ts beneficial to your kidneys as well. | %, Cured Without Drugs! You can regain your heaith, over-| nervoun debility, rheumatism, | ach troubl che and that| tired feeling in the privacy of| MAMhome, without the s of dru r This rem- ectricity, the power that an Wear Electra-Vita while you sleep. Tt filly the nerves and vitals with new tite You wake up in the morning full of vim free from pains and ach | Electra-Vita is & seif-charged body| Battery, which pum steady, Broken stream of gajvanie electricity 1 nerves for hours while you sleep, bullding them with new ener the sire omen to matiem, plaint. or just a lack of nerve force, ra-Vita will be found to be an iective remedy. KAD WHAT THIS MAN SAYS OF | ELECTRA-VITA pal y and stron) Mo. 1 a E PAO —— Consultation free. Office hours: 9 #.m, to 619 p. m.; Bundays or even- aR by sppointment. Phone Main The Electra-Vita Co. | 206 Empress | a git ce Ave, Cor, s Seattle, Wash. Call or write for our bean- tiful 90-page book, which ail about our treat. ment drink before breakfast each morn-|* | Gold fillings .. THIS SHOWS HOW GERMANS ARE DISTRIBUTED STAR-—TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1917. THRUOUT PAGE 7 THE U. S. | Armour of Chicago {the first recruits Rood is another. jan’ sassie' economy banner. th dinner that was give to Mr. Laneir bein cordin’ to what I read, an’ they was Janitor’s Wife Worries About Economy Faddists She's one of| meal An’ our own Mrs. | An’ all the club ladies everywhere all rallyin’ ‘round the|!I wrong? |had experience ment. What needs is officers They'r kind of military work ‘Id ye read about the economy | for McGuire nto a pair for jan’ his wife? Mra, Wilson wan |for school |there, an’ all the cabinet ladies, It} “That's the |ehows what I mean about them /have in mind inexperienced. They was only three courses, nc that # ‘Us a fine move this Economy Am I right or am It needs officers that has | “Nevertheless, takes a pile of cloth to make pants I'm makin’ kind of experience | » kind these |recruits in the Economy army lack You may say in your newspaper an experienced economist I |Curfew Shall Ring Tonight at Chertsey England, April CHERTS Curfew may ring its head 17 off tonight, with the passing of the ban on needless nocturnal BY A REPORTER “An' there wouldn't be 18 guests,| noises. And the Chertsey our P ‘ believe me! I wouldn't invite no | few is the old original and only et een readin’ the | Papers body, What with Mike an’ me an’! genuine “must not ring tonight® Heitaon én’ tte, Masel ail haw start,| the 8x children to what'd we! contraption that inspired the by prondlag _ceic rege sg be invitin’ outsiders for poem od," said Mra, MoGuire, the aseist: | | * P ant janitor’s wife. “1 don’t know what they et at} When the Zeppelins were Tis w grand movement, an’ I'm|the Lansing dinner, but I s'pone| making Periodic tours | te hae is ‘Biron , they had a simple soup to start strafe” the tight little isle, it lot of fine ladies has joined with, an’ then @ one steak, an’ wee & question whether engine the army, an’ they're goin’ to econ-| Wound up with strawberries from| bells, curfews and the like diame omlze #o's there'll be more money | Floridy tae aonihe ryt hs ; care to xpend to lick the Germans | “A simple repast, say you? Met pot pA sep 10 take a y m | tle ecOnol jo ee sebyars There's Mra, Armour, now—Mre.|by. But not what I call an economy) (yan. very cuntew in Eng | and had its throat done up in © | a muffler, and there was noth- | ing doing on the happy chimes, Chertsey was hard hit by the order, inasmuch as the local eur- part of the army o| few has beeh a “But I'm sure I don't know how| “D’ye seg this thing {f me hand aay ; , te for seve elght |the poor dears will manage. |it's what's left of a pair of Mike's| ‘town's life for seven oF They're raw troops, as you might|pants. ‘The seat is gone entirely ; ell, now the Ze} ve had y, havin’ had no experience in| but they’s good clothin th’ legs, It Well, now th ps have their wings clipped pretty short, and the risk is down to a mint mum, so the curfews are telling their tale or tolling their tell with old-time solemnity. ‘em over They'll do/ boiled cabbag ‘I would say, in concludin’ the ime terview, that the army should be officered by workin’ men's wives, raw 18 guests offer my services to the Economy | They've been economizin’ all thelt Sa NER 1S PERCENT ‘GERMAN BORN | “Now, if I was to give an econ-|army. I will be its general i mm BrelS PERCENT omy dinner—an’, for the matter of “If the ladies will ablish a — ~ CS FROM 4 1B PER CENT that, all my dinners is that kind—| training camp be glad to| FINES, RESULTING from convie- [there wouldn't be three courses—|show them how to prepare a rea} | tions on charges of violations of the This map shows graphically the distribution of native-born Germany| !owa and Nebraska, with scattered patches in Michigan, Ohio, Missouri, or two. There'd be one, an’ a stingy |economy dinn@r out of a soup-bone | prohibition law, amounted to $425 thruout the United States. Mote the two black patches in which more the Dakotas, Texas and Nevada fone at that! an’ what's left yesterday's | Monday tha: 15 per cent of the inhabita '¢ German-born—one of them start Sections in which the tive-born Germans number less than 8 but! ing at Milwaukee and extending north and weet thru North Centrai| more than 4 per cent of the people include Detroit, Cleveland, Toledo, Wisconsin, the other being in the south central porition of Minnesota. Observe that the distric' per cent German-born include Chicago, St. Paul, and Madison, and cover large portions ee te whoee inhabitants are betw t. Loul of Wisconsin, IIlinol n 8 and 15 Davenport Minnesota, Like Try It. You's INVESTIGATE DEATH hk OF 65-YEAR-OLD BOY Investigation into the aceident |that caused the death of David Dean, 5, son of Mr. and Mra. G. P- when he was crushed under a | Tiffin. According to Thomas Nelson, fore inch log, will be made by Coroner) prom a visit to C | Columbus, Cincinnati, Evaneville, Springfield, t1.; \ city Omaha, Lincoln, ‘and San Francisco. ! | | Dr. Suzsallo, president of the U. of W., says the advent of the He has just nadian cities. nadians, Buffalo, Newark, Brooklyn, Burlington, ioux City, Houston, Galveston, Denver, Portland N. Y.; Pittsburg, Dubuque, Saginaw, Bay AUTO CRASHES INTO | WILITIA COMPANY Five ‘soldiers of the First Co. Washington Coast artillery, wer knocked down and severely bruis Dean, at 3120 Alki ave, who was) United States tn the war has raised /4q while drilling, when an auto instantly killed Monday afternoon,| the hopes and spirits of the Ca-|criven by Charles D. Davis, Elks returned | club, crashed into them at the cor |ner of Fourth ave. and Blanchard |#t. Monday evening. Davis vgis ar-| rested after he had told his story | | fenutta”’ [man of the crew of the Occidental |, TA semiannual banquet of the |i, Lieut. of Police Joe Mason. He siways [Lumber Co, they were engaged in| S*attle council of Boy Scouts will ig out on $100 ball | follow ine | Tolling logs into the Sound on skids,| °° held at the Butler hovel Tue® | Verne Nelson, 6607 Twelfth ave. | [when the little fellow jumped up| “*” evening ari N. E.; Artaur Rittelkau, 4471 Whit and put his hands on a log. In |man ave; Fred Knowlton, 1107 some way he was lifted off his fect) The military will of Private Har | fast Denny way, were painfully in and buried over to the other sido, 04 Bellamy Burdette, Seattle | jured by the accident. The three An examination showed the boy's| 0rist. who died in service “som | were taken to the regimental in | neck: een beeen, | where In France,” was probated in| firmary at the Armory ah: "i superior court Monday. It is writ-|” Agnes Hicks, 11, daughter of Mra ten on a leaf torn from a regi-| ray iticks, 7932 Goth ave. 8, was Ointment Best known application for dis eased skins, Not! pimples, ing bette y For septic powder to be shak and sprinkled In the foot bath. sting owt of corns and and give Instant retief to tired. ewollen, tender feet. Over 109, gen are bain Billed troops at the front. where, tic. Don't accept eruptions, Sale At All Druggists in! Original Red Cartons flatirg thru the system, eventu- | quae Inset Sb eit ool ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE DOES IT. When your shoes pinch or your and bunione ache so that you are all over, get Allen's Foot-Easa the used by the German and Boid any substitute Vojta Benes, lecturer and or. ganizer of the Bohemian National Alliance of America, will speak Wednesday at the Labor temple at |S p.m. to Seattle Slava. The lec- ture will deal with the entrance of the United States in the war, HEIDELBERG “=> Dill Pickles antl are put up Te according to i an ie Old German for pol- | rash, corne tired ery~ bad or careless treatment. lare very careful in hair washing. | no hair we will have virtually troubles. trifling expense by simply ing a teaspoonful to all the hair instead of J top of the head. This che: dissolves all impurities and a soothing, cooling lather. leaves the scalp spotiessly soft and pliant, while ural color, also a fluffiness makes it seem much heavier than ft is, After a canthrox shi poo, arranging the hair is a pleasure. REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS 4 strength to the hu-|@ order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which ‘Nghtest and strongest plate known, \does not cover the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $10 set of teeth ...-.. Bridge work, per tooth, gold White crowns . ‘ Silver fillings . Platina fillings ..---- ie teed for 18 years. pdiPrrort, sere sen inthe moras teeth same Gay. ination and advice free. Mest of eur present pat: earl recommended by our a givin or § ave tested our work When to our office, be sure yer right place. Bring this OHIO“... 20f UNIVERSITY 8T. Op gestte Fraser-Pagereon Today’s Aid to Beauty |} Hair is by far the most conspicu-| ous thing about us and is prob! ably the most easily damaged by An especially fine sham- poo for this weather, one that i |brings out all the natural beauty ltirely removes all dandruff, excess | loll and dirt, can easily be used at of canthrox (which you can get at any drus-| gist’s) in a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enough so {t Is easy to apply it the |takes on the glossy richness of nat- of Our Plate We Stané Time. customers whe | re in the 4 with you Dentists | 08 pa Recipe ‘They Are Delictous TRY THEM Packed In sanitary tins and sold by all grocers. No. 2 size tin ife No. 3 size tin 200 SEATTLE 4 PUGET SOUND PACKING CO. ACLEAR COMPLEXION If we! lof the hair, that dissolves and en-| Ruddy Cheeks — Sparkling Eyes ® —Most Women Can Have Gays Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known isnolv- wine a Obio Physician treated scores of woman for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription lust the | made of a few well-known vegetable mically| ingredients mixed with olive oil, creates| naming them Dr, Edwards’ Olive Rinsing | Tablets, you will know them by clean, | their olive color. hair} These tablets are wonder-workers jon the liver and bowels, which cause }a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system If you have a pale face, sal- low look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bow- | els, you take one tablet nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women as well as | men take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets |—the successful substitute for calo- |mel—now and then just to keep in |the pink of condition. 10c and 25¢ which fs the Home of the Kryptok Lens. $3.00 We Sraeerlo , Monufacture and Fit . rept Beattie’s leading Optical Place. $3.00 Established 1910, $3.00 NO CHARGE for Screws, 1.00 up Springs or Leather Cases. ( SPROIAL—We will fit you , with { gumrante i complete, including ? Exem- ‘ wh ex ) amination....... As om= 008 EVERYTHING FOR THE EVE AND EAR 4055-4066 Arcade Building Fourth Floor, co! on Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 ‘years e , Mental pay book, and is the first county | ary | University men are urged not to enlist, ment of war department plans. It franklin Beil, commander of the | Western division of the army. . oe letters Puget Censorship of }maiied to and |sound navy personal from the adopted. pietures mailed by bas been established eee news services Cross wanis to this amount base hospital university ambulance corps. effort to raise the membership from 4,000 to 20,000 will be made raise nd $10,000 for the | County Hospital to Give Girls Chance to Train as Nurses course, can obtain practical experi ence, fitting them for battlefield service, by applying to Dr. J. Tate Mason, superintendent of the King County hospital. Only six will be accepted. They must give a writ |ten pledge to serve Uncle Sam | when he calls for Red Cross work- | ers. | CREDIT MEN ELECT $30,000—of | $15,000 will be for a| Every | Segre a Sb pecan F Six Red Cross girls, who have taken the preliminary lecture seriously injured Monday afternoon will of its kind ever filed in King | when she was struck by an auto mobile as she alighted from a street car at Rainier ave and Rose *t. Fred Hyke, 1108 Fifth ave. re-| but to await the announce | ported at police headquarters that! he was the driver of the car that | is claimed that the plans provide | struck the girl. they shall be made officers. The | | information was sent to President | Suzzallo, of the university by Gen. | March a “Jinx” for European Monarchs | LONDON, April 17.—The month | of March holds a persistent jinx rd and from ships of | for : i, the Pacific reserve fleet, has been | xe uropean royalties, as shown In addition, censorship of | by a table of regal murders, do thronements and abdications fol lowing the czar's removal Old Gustavus IIL, king of Sweden, | mot his on March 16, 1792; Alex The cruiser Saratoga, undergo | andor Ii, of Russia, the 3rd of ‘ing repairs at Bremerton, is to March, 1881, and George L, of have her name changed. This| Greece, on March 1%, 1913, Ail name ts wanted for one of the DEW) were murdered. Charles IIL, Duke crofsere. ee jof Parma, also went by the mur % | der route in March, 1854 The Seattle Chapter of the Red} Gustavus IV., of Sweden, was de throned by his affectionate uncle, the Duke of Sudermania, March 15, 1809. | The abdication of Nicholas, of Russia, and his abdication at the jsame time on behalf of his son, | completes the lst of March upheav: @ als which prove the monarch’s life in March is not 126 HOMEKEEPERS — GO TO CONFERENCE Discussions lea onstration of “30 ways ‘to cook jeggs,” to a lecture on, "What Ev lery Woman Should Know of Bust |ness to Help Her Husband,” at the second session of the third annual |conference of | at the | University of Tues: | day Other and a@ happy ¢ from a dem | ers Washington subjects were, erving,” by ‘Household ort KE. Rose Know of Finance,” ‘Canning Frances E. Chemistry What Women by J Heverlo Wise tauaitin “Vaakte Sia bien pangler, vice president of the | elation nominated candidates for|* ci vtryaee plate eau h | offices of the organization at the to Send a Woman to Col | monthly meeting held at the Wash se Mg wthel Coldwell; ington Annex Monday night. Twen ron ea da gy ty-one delegates were chosen to the | Reah Whiteb« fow to Pre. national convention in Kansas City | emt Fires in the Home,” by J. H./ pa sorygnme Schively, of the state surveying | “The duty of the American Busi.|@%4 rating bureau; and a demon-| ness Man in the Present Intorna.|*t'ation of a company dinner by) tional Crisis” was the subject of an| Miss sary Rausch, | | address by Edwin 8. Selvin One hundred and 26 women at tended the opening session Mon-| | THEATRES | PANTAGES Dances and costumes that are startling and beautiful are the chief features of an “Artist's Dream,” headline act at Pantages, The girls dance barefoot. You can't help laughing at and with Cris Richards, English flip- flop artis:, Heghas a takeoff on every other act Slack and tight wire stunts that make the hair stand on end staged by the Kimiwa troupe, Jap: might not seem the proper place for catchy comedy, but the “Phun Phiends” turn one wild with mirth, attractive songs, and pretty costumes. “The Twister,” farce comedy, staged by Paul Decker and com pany, is a clever sketeb and. makes 4 decided hit. Accordion numbers that are tune {ful and well played) ere presented by the Marcon! Brothers Ragtime features the tolre of the Knickerbocker Male quartet The current episode of Patria patriotic serial, is the picture fea- ture. are | | day, only seven of whom were unt-| versity students, the others ranged from brides-to-be to grandmothers. | Meetings are being held in Meany| hall, FRANK CLANCY DIES Frank Clancy, old-time Seattle) First ward politician and racing| man, who lived in this city for 40 years, died at Wallace, Idaho, of} neumonia, Monday afternoon. | Clancy was 55 years old, and came to Seattle in 1872 with his uncle, he late Thomas Clancy, He and his five brothers were partners with the uncle in the hotel and Hquor bust ness, Thomas Clancy and Charles} Clancy, one of the brothers, were} members of the city council for sev-, eral terms, Later Frank formed a) partnership with a California racing man and operated a string of racing stables on the Coast. He went to: Wallace four years ago, and bas been In the hotel business there, He ves two living brothers, John and orge Clancy, ani two sisters, Mrs Mary Hughes ¢ 8, Grace Jame AH CHIN, Ab Fung and Mar W a Wee, charged with gambling, yes | terday pleaded guilty, and were fined $100 each by Justice Brinker, ano RAUL 9 Working Under a Continual Strain? Does a Lame Back Keep You Worn ff “Every Picture Tells a Story” Out All the Time? M AYBE you have weak kidney , a trouble that often follows grip, a cold, a fever, or a spell of worry, overwork or unwise habits. It shows in constant, dull, throbbing backache, or sharp twinges when stooping, lifting, getting up, or turning in bed, with headaches, dizzy spells, a tired, nervous state and irregular, abnormal kidney action, Don’t neglect weak kidneys, or you run the danger of having dropsy, gravel, heart disease or Bright’s disease. The kidneys are the blood fil- ters and must work all the time to keep you in good health. Take things easier, follow thousand people. Here Are Several Seattle Cases Nob Hill Avenue Mra. SA Hi Ave va ago Doan’s then 1 claimed f em, T used them when [ was having a dull heavy aching across the small my back, When T wot straighten after — stooptn sharp pains would often dart through me and k retions were irresy me much ann box of Doan ine_so much I got the s and since using it I have not be 1 ney w r generally fin which gave me. I use and was my back Another suffered of nd Ninth Avenue Ww. iL ductor tieed that Palmer Ninth had a great with my back Mrs, 8. J 212 Ave deal of trouble and kidneys, and ft think the complaint was inherited. At timea | was ost down with bad spells ¢ and acute sorer c neys. [had severe headachor and pains in the back of my neck. I knew that my suffor- ing was due to my kidneys, an they were too frequent in action. Doan’s Kidney Pills thoroughly rid me of the com-[ I plaint.” and they says I 4103 backache ross my kid-f ache T back weak and used Kidney Pills Every Druggist has Doan’s, 50c a Box. regular habits, and take Doan’s Kidney Pills, a remedy in use the world over, and recommended publicly in the U. S. A. by fifty Doan’s Kidney Pills are certainly worth a trial. Wheeler, says: “A few years I had pains in my and other trouble, due bd kness, These al feel and I the quick and sure retie: Kidney continued atirely cure I never had any or Doan's family more severely f k kidneys than I did, wa ured by Doan'’s Kidne: Woodland Park Ave. Baker, Woodland “The first there railroad con was thing wrong with my kidneys was whefi my had k began to} dull ache across the small of my became lame I also had hea and dizzy spells, and my kid- neys were trregular in action. Kidney n gave relief.” n's Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, DOAN'S | Fifth Avenue, N. 06 Nob Edmund H rowe, engineer, 1015 Fifth Ave. says: “I was having considerable trou- with my kidneys HH] tions used to || causing me to | back of freely, | nights. My back was lama | and weak and used to pain most of the time, TI often had terrible headaches and dizay I tried a number of but got Mttle help | | | spells. Ht tried Doan's Kidney i I HH] remedies until 1 Pills. After using two boxes. my back got better and ms kidneys acted regularly. Since then I have not been’ trou- bled.” Carleton Avenue BE. Spink, says and 5624 Car- “My back night and 1 When I tried » straighten after stooping, sharp pains darted through me. I Was nervous and had headaches and terrible dizay spells. The kidney secrettons were unnatural, After trying a number of medicines with- out relief I finally began using Doan's Kidney Pills, After the first box, I im: Park 1 no some heavy and hes proved in every way, &o T took two more, Since then T have not been troubled at all.” Pius '. Y., Mirs, t45ESE! ty! hehe tI RERIRCET CLE $e FS

Other pages from this issue: