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E.*s.".}) COLYUM SEATTLE STAR] 1R0T Bevemth Ave. Near Union St, res KAGUR OF NEWSPAPHRS | e = If yo dont want 5,000 of | x eter eee eee the state's money main 1 by | | By mail, out of city, 280 per month up to € moa, # mos i year $2.80 Howell, howl! | Ry carrier, ofty 25 a month. @ e Pablienea Da The Star | ~¥ re ee | — _ Counciiman Erickson, in other words, Is of the opinion that what's good for the goose good for the gander, If the common user clase is good for the Traction company on the it Save That $45,000 ote, James A » president of the attle Ad club, Fremont bridge, it’s also good | Me mishes food for serious thought when he says thats it is} fer the ba ” Third ave | iF doubtful if this is the year to make a campaign for tourists | Mend yet, Secretary of State Howell and the Pacific Northwest] CAN BUY ANOTHER SPUD | H* Tourist association are merrily dispos of some thousands of] gorgiey aeidg) aie coutnia ta | ae th already in such a campaign by appointing a few salary |$30-a month. Every bit helps | grabbers. | eee The nation at war may commandeer, to a very large ex-| And John De Frieze advertioes Rent, the passenger trains in all railways. This is indicated | as leases for sale in West Vir Bin the announcement last night Fairfax Harrison, chair-|whom the East Ohio N Co. got Seman of the war board of the American Railway association. |gas last winter out passenger trains, there surely can be no large tourist] Me E: Without p B° : h brrar ete | SAUERKRAUT ‘EM travel, no matter how well advertised the Northwest would be | Wi I le Soe rth ans hich fact any | To cateh the German submarines, | ith the present line-up, furthermore, which lacks men eka CRGIeADAUL “act tk On Fate practical advertising experience, it is doul if, even under] float tt out in the ocean, and wait, the most advantageous railroad facilities RIGHT kind of| for ‘em to come uy 4 4 Bdvertising would be had | ce Bu | 3 The state of Washington appropriated $45,000 to be used| A Seattle detective has come | F ey " cro: with nto catch U-doats, | Hin conjunction with advertis funds of Oregon and British |e none to sce the day when oot @ Columbia. Seattle detective comes acrous with Ts there no way to save that ey from & plan to catch a burglar } eeenners in view of t . ‘ ha hes ¢ ee ae H ising 1 a: foe ot Sa ey | - declare there ought to be practically no “overhead” exp lwhat to do with tale setana. Catt ‘ It’s up to Secretary of State Howell ‘em out. “If you want to fight, join 3 the army.” ; i oe y | France is threatened with a short The Nerve of It, aciee crete i een jare sful people, and will Tt is rep that mission te for it—wall paper | whet officially au red or « ance | Know, are to visit Washington’to protest ag . “s | lam embargo on foodstuffs going to those ¢ Somebod asked Ole Hanson} the probability of making! y ip the real éstate business. | | ade mot Tt is nerve unequalled save that ti 4 pockets well-filled with war profits from our enemy, Sy You wil make toner if you: 4} sted against American sales to the allies | well,” he replied. “And you will do} We are at war with Germany. Norway and Sweden are) Wel! If you make m pne selling nickel and other metals to Germany with which Ger COMRADES And Norway and Sweden ex aded ur fi |many will ki] us Americans. us to keep their din we give them a beefsteak with one of a in} r the! Joe Eppling voreed for wife a |serving two years rem Sheboygan tables i with and a shell jany’s use with the other? We wil t focestet byreyage wilt fino “ed A ; married the first M ng, has We hope that those commissioners prov ied themselves|ieen sent to jail for upport. | round-trip tickets before leaving home |Eppling and Murray py the! | sare Pond du Lac (Wis.) Re Dugh on Scruples | Gents calculating upon dodging n P Weligious scruples against war had better read that exer Stanza over again. It n reads that | Bt AMR | FIRES no person s ted shall be exempted from any service ir capa Keeping {n good health by right! shai pt irom an . M y . }living iy the patriotic duty of every that the president shall declare to be non-combatant. j Seatiens, Mak | [ye abat nice word “non-combatant” has the properties of} ness will hamper @ cold-chisel and a rubber blanket. It can be made to} the national effi-' clency, whether just cover a pin-point or a three-ring circus. The president ES" : . among soldiers or mi set you to working in a powder plant with your noncombatants, Disease = preven- —— tion is a good form of preparedness. The mobilization of the country's | agricultural products must go hand | fe * ake It Hot for Them lagretaral roti me | Democratic Leader Kitchin made a point in the first day’s|ting factories and ammunition jon of the proposed income tax. He said that the| Plants on a war footing«The health " . s sitet = of a nation depends in a large ittee did not go over 50 per cent in taxing incomes! measure upon its food the wealthy men would put their money into rur The wanton destruction of food and other non-taxable bonds, draw 4 per cent and not|!s as much of a traitorous act as 4 Itering a national enemy or war tax. — Pabalitgg stroying arms and ammunition or put-| | Publicity! Publicity! Let the people know who these!" ‘The housewi be econosy | tors are that they may hunt them from the country! }ical in the preparation of food and! 7 Must cook it well, so that mea will be tasty and digestible and waste will be eliminated. Editorialettes able disea should = tnelu THE RIGHT will can defeat the wrong way. jeination against typhoid and small- pox Germany saved enough men from smallpox in the past ten years to offset her terrific losses at Verdun, cording to health experts. | Fewer men were killed in the] armies of the North and South in the civil war than have died from typhoid fever in the United States jin the past ten years. Yet this dis 4 ‘ hat fil ith Cane fe entirely preventable “AN AMERICAN has invented a gas bomb that fills the eyes wit! Reduction of the infant mortality | me re eee | ra # will help repair the wastages SENATOR BEN JOHNSON of Spokane recommends a special ses)! 0 Or. ‘of the legislature, to recall some of the appropriations that are not) 1, gures in the present war emergency. It would save a few millions, al! _right—if those lawmakers wouldn’t appropriate a new batch of ex. AND NOW the kaiser is monkeying with Italy for a separate His secret diplomacy is about as tough to handle as hie sub i ricci A BAD man is worse when he pretende to be a saint.—Bacon. “GERMANY’S MAKING sauerkraut out of Taste the fe; odor new. turnips. ) Canadian Do- n compiled by alth officials show that th minion’s losses #ince the Eur |war started are considerably |than the loss preventable [disease at home during | pertod. The repopulation of a after war depends largely azing Power of Bon-Opto To Make Weak Eyes Strong with which Ith ‘Doctor Says It Strengthens |Yeutable. Glasaee Eyesight 50 per cent in One HEALTH QUESTIONS AN the same country | | SWERED Week’s Time in Many Instances ,.°. 2°", (en eat —_ times, my face flushes, head feels A Free Prescription You Can Have}in a reasonable time and multt-|heavy and have poor circulation 4 Filled and Use at Home = Monge ; will be able to|Am also very nervous.” Vict eye strain and|*trengthen their eyes so as to be| Constipation might caune all of pms of k heb and those spared the trouble and expense of your symptoms, but I would advise! ee or) weexnee ever getting glasses. Eye troubles! you to have a complete physical who wear glasses, will be glad/of many descriptions may be won- examination. The examination fo know that, according to Dr.|derfully benefited by the use of this|shouid include urine and blood Lewis, there 1s real hope and help/Prescription at home. Go to any | pressure tests for them. Many whose eyes were | active drug store and get a bottle of om | say they have had thetr| Bon-Opto tablete. Drop one Bon-Opto Mrs. J. Ke L—"Th ‘ Ai restored by this remarkable| tablet in a fourth ofa glass of water| Mrs. J. Ke I. The septum of) ption and many who once|and let it dissolve, With this liquid, |™> no" 1s crooked and almost ore glasses say they have thrown| bathe the eyes two to four times | (One® one nostril, causing an in-| {hem away. One man says, after|daily. You should notice your eyes (famed and catarrhal condition “| was almost biind,| Clear up perceptibly right from the| Should I have an operation? start and {inflammation and red.| When the septum separating the | ness will quickly disappear. If your|MOstrils is bent to one side and] eyes bother you even a little it is|interferes with nose breathing the ee to read at all. Now everything without my using Could not s I can read and my eyes do not hurt more. At night they would| your duty to take steps to save|condition should be corrected b dreadfully. Now they feel | them now before ft is too late,|42 operation KB. L. K.: “Tl suffer greatly trom hoadaches. The room in which 1 work, aa well as my bedroom, is| ventilated, What is the Many hopelessly blind might have saved their sight if they had cared for their eyes in time, i the time. It was like a mir. A lady who used it 9 p atmosphere seemed with or without glasses, but using this prescription for 15 fine al Note: Another prominent physl-| an to whom the above article waa| Well Gays everything seems clear. I can sorters oe a Yes, the Bon-Opto| cause?” " escription is truly’ a wonder? read even fine print without Temeay. tn. conatitge et!!! Most headaches are due to con 4 Another who used i dients are well known to emi-| stipation or eye strain. If you can was bothered Si ° e ee pperenteyy oa. i pres} rule out the first, have your eyea 7 strain caused by ee ab gy r successfully in my own practice on| examined | © eyes which fnduced fierce head- nts whose eyes were strained | Oe aches. I have worn glasses for|through overwork or misfit glasses. sears, both for distance ant |i say Kier," chiugr meeting’ ties | DISCUSS BIG TOPICS| © work, and without them I could not|ing. burning eyes, red lids, fused | yead my own name on an envelope | vision, or for even inflamed t YORK, May 18.-—The big ie or the typewriting on the machine|fr",", 0 pnake. sun. dust or wind./gext manufacturers in the t ited | re me. I can do both now and|tiona I feel should be kept on hand | States, representing nearly every Taye discarded iny long distance |for regular use in almost every fam-|industry, aksembled at the Wal-| r altogetter, Tcan count the |i a patant inodicine ce a ost it |dort-Astoria today for the three: | Ing leaves on the trees acroas | remed Itisa al paratio a nvention of the National now, which for several|the formula rinted on t ation of Manufacturer package h facturers guar-| antes It to strengthen eyesight 60 per cent in one week's time in many ins stances or refund the money. It can be obtained from any good druggiat and is noid in thin city by the leading druggists. Advertisement like a dim green my v demands upon manu facturers ans a result of the war trade conditions caused by the con flict and the financial situation | we big topics of discussion, is believed that thousands who rd them } loff the wall strolled away alone ed as did more than o th The trader in curiosities grinned D ib! Servi Open Saturday Until 10 p. m. aden. 8 card many| with a certain gratification tn dis oube ce |tales of hin bravery and of his rid-| appointing this handsome Chasseur ee Tone ing. and perhaps it was his very! Not one. The toys don't take |] During noon and dinner hours. STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1917. PAGE 4 | NEXT NOVEL “THE GOLD BUG” By Edgar Allan Poe “UNDER TWO FLAGS” BY LOUISE DE LA REME (OUIDA) nnn Buy Now What You Need in Clothes! No live man wants to be the last-minute man. Now is always the time for him, and we are ready, splen- didly ready to supply your needs. { { ( , { (Continued From Our Last lesue)} bursts of temper, unjust punish-jpleked up in dry river channels or ments pronounced on his men, and | broken off stray bowlders; figures his indecencies with native won of Arabs and Moore, dainty b There wax sourething about this |of dancing-girls, and tiny char Cigarette blew a puff of smoke, and jumping down | contemptuour | It was Just noon, and. there were | Louis Victor, as the big stranger| fretting like Bucephalus Th y| Tomorrow will be a great outfitting day at Gately’s. j fow could brave the noon-heat as | che to 1 himself, t uncon-| were perfectly conceived and exe | B she did, Cigarette’s falcon-eyes | 8clously pointed toward n liv-|euted | fe sure to come darted right and left; «he leaped |!ng and honorable dealing; and this| Hoe had alw had a gift that) down over the great masses of |{n spite of the fact that he was a) way, tho, in common with all b Y A I . d Turkish ruins and alighted ip front |member of a French Algerian regi. | gifts, he shad utterly neglected it ou Are nvite ir world, and | of a Chansour d'Afrique, who was|ment that was notorious as being until, cast adrift on the sitting alone on a broken fragment | Made up of society's outcasts of all | for to do something to main-| to Open a of white marble Kinds, from escaped criminals to)tain himself, bo had solaced many ‘ on & er! Ta gentlemen rakes {a dreary hour in barracks aod un Ch A PiBere Myo fee gtr | , Tako a/Ferrom the extremes of luxury, in-|der canvas with the toy-sculpture. | arge ccount He started and rose. |duigence, pleasure, Cecil came to| (Continued in Our Next Issue) Ab. ma belle, ia ft you?” he said |the extremes of hardship, discip-| . | You need not pay all in 30 days. wearlly. “You do me much honor,’ |line and toil Next Novel, “The Gold Bug,” by| _ We arrange terme. to oult you. Cigarette gave a little petulant} The first years were of intense | Edgar Allen Poe. | y, twist to the tap of her wine barrel, | misery to him, only relieved by| 4 med to that style of|the loyalty and devotion of the| Ze She was not vlutation resented it. Morbleu!” \. ‘BOOSTS FOR THRIFT WASHINGTON, May 18.—It isn't necessary militant She half liked it halt) man who had followed bim into his exile, But, however wretched, not SPRING KK she sald pettishly, even Rake ever heard from him a] be mon | single syllable of irritation or of . to You are too fine for us dress in khaki, or march to an of. G brave, In what country, I won. | Selfpity. |fice to give war ald to the country, Y der, does one learn such dainty} He was too thoroughbred to at-| according to a messake to women y ceremony, jtempt to claim a superiority that| issued by the recretary o rt ‘ dei “Where should one learn courte-|fortune no longer conferred on | culture today 7, Z #15, $18, 820. $25 up te sles, if not in France?’ he an-jhim, And bis quickeyed comrades| “sake economy fashionable, lest Z $40 swered wearily, He had danced|knew, before he had been among |{¢ pecome obligatory,” {# the note FZ ‘oul We offer incomparable assort- with this girl fer the night be-|them five minutes, that an “aris:/he sounds. “Demonstrate thrift in MA ments of all that’s new and de- fore, seeing lor the first time.|tocrat’ had taken refuge under the} your homes and make saving, ihr att i “Out!” cried Cigarette, “They | Flag of Mazagran rather than spending, your soctal sisable in Suite for meas: say you are English, but you sound! But when they found that he| standard.” : j new colors and weaves—every the double L's too well. A Span-|could fight Ike a Zouave, ride like | - — new model is here for you to jard, eh?” an Arab, and bear shot-wounds or asta A soldier of France Can you) desert-thirst as tho he were of| choose from—our values are the wish me more bronze, it grew a delight to them| best that you can buy anywhere. Bird’s Cafeteria Her eyes flashed and softened—jto see of what steel this dainty | her one love was the tricolor |patrician was made; and they) “True!” she said simply But loved him with a dog-like love, Dress Well—Never Miss the Money | when they fount! that bis Inst crust, in a long march, would always be bat the most desperate | of danger was always vol you were not always a soldier nee? You joined, they say, twelve years ago? What were you divided before th service he sald slowly ed for by him; and that all} ompte went in giving a vet ‘This slogan reflects the in- You belonged to the majority, | ¢T™® toup of wine, ¢ a sick || Provides the widest possible terest of this store in you. It is t said Cigarette, and up | Conseript tempting meal t , t i 1 gave up a ‘ | y of foods to sult every not a selfish interest, but one her search for information As he went now, in the warmth and cooked to the satisfac An hour later, Cigarette left the /of the after-glow, he turned up into|| tion of the most particular that is prompted by this store's Chasseur sitting where she had|the Rue Babazoum and paused be-|| epicure. ne ire to serve you, to found him, In his band was a/fore the entrance of a picturesque | help you “Dress Well” tn clothes paper, six months old, and his eyes | shop. | rested on @ line in the obituary A cunning, wizen head peered out | at him from the gloom of the better kind and through a generous charge account serv- lee, enable you to pay for your Continuous oo me ‘| “Ab, ha! Good-even, Corporal Vises Viewer!” idpolgazeilb skis NEW SPRING HATS cioties so that you will “Never otte’s Coctl, at the words, crossed the $2.00 to $7.50 Mies the Money.” strapee ¢ d/efll and entered EVERY DAY—1! A. M. TO disdain because he t d her as| “Haye you sold any?” he asked, | a P.M, Apparel for Women and Misses a child and not as a o be! hesitation in the words. ! Boys’ Suits $7.75 to $9.75 CATELYS difference and tracted her. coldness that at-| Dagger or This means quickest service out of apent balls now anything made so off like wild Not so with bie eblef, Chateau: | fire: but your ivory bagatelles are | Orchestra Music roy, however, who had made him|no sort of use, M. le Caporal 1270 2P.M.; 8TOTP.M a Corporal because his fant| “Very well—no matter,” id if yea wage and gallant conduct in t yerless | Cecil, aa he paused a moment skirmishes bad made it impossible |fore some delicate little statuettes c onvenient! to cast him wholly aside. Chateau /and carvings miniature things, penty een 1113 THIRD AVENUE Between Seneca and Spring Streets. Second and Seneca roy hated the silent soldier whom | carved out of a piece of ivory, or Uvely knew held him n/a bi of marble the size of a for his reasonable | hors hoof, such as could b&b SUPPORT "OUR COUNTRY AND PROTECT YOURSELF No real American needs be told to stand by his country in times like these. Patriotism is everywhere in evidence, one of its best expressions be- ing the support you are giving the Red Cross. Today, however, with not an idle man to be found; with manufacturers, farmers and everybody producing commodities at top speed, you are never- theless at your wits’ end to meet the daily rising cost of necessities. Everything you eat costs you more. Practically everything you wear is either higher in price or lower in quality— in many cases both. When you have, under these conditions, access to a store where prices in the main are still kept at the old level, and where all goods are guaranteed quality goods—wool that is wool and colors that are fast—you would be shiftless and extravagant not to go there and save money. he In» contempt SAVE SAVE There are many reasons why Schermer's is the store where you save. Ii is not how he does it, however, but the fact that he does do it that interests you. Schermer says in his advertising and by word of mouth, that when you buy here you save. He follows it up and says to you, make me prove it. | consider these to be manly, open-and-above-board tatements from a man who is reliable, who is financially responsible, who has a big store and a big and loyal follows He can’t afford to misrepresent. It is not the one-time but the follow-up,come-again business that makes his bus- so I say, if you don't take him at his word and make him prove it, no one but yourself is the loser. don't Schermer sells a wonderful Suit value at Fifteen Dollars. Better ones, of course, for “The Best $15 Suit in Seattle,” he says, and if you don’t find it so—your money back. in iness successful. Five or Ten Dollars more. ‘ Mll the way down the line of Furnishings his goods stand up under wear, and go to you at prices lower than else- where. His stock of Men’s Shoes is a marvel, the biggest in Seattle, and it will make your pocketbook real happy when you see the price marks. : Protect yourself against the high cost of living. Don’t spend all you earn. Buy where your money goes farthest. Compare quality and price in store after store and you'll find that Schermer’s is the place where you save. Carl Schermer NOW IS THE . TIME TO SAVE HERE IS THE PLACE TO SAVE 103-197 FIRST AVE. SOUTH TEN ‘ STEPS FROM YESLER