The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 4, 1917, Page 4

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"4 ° STAR—SATURDAY, AUG. 4, 1917. PAGE 4 r-) \ : I or arve Owar Ave Ociali D oa When a big volcano, after long quies- ties will rise and fall. Probably no one now forced upon the belligerents. It has mines, are state socialism. Phe pi cence, breaks into violent eruption, pour- | 30 will ever see the globe completely quiet shown them nations no longer fight with mandeering of shipyards is state socia _ ing forth lava and red-hot ashes for months politically. armies alone, but en masse, with every citi- __ It means the doctrine has been estab- the disturbance does not end when the erup- After the great Napoleonic wars Europe zen playing his part. i lished that the selfish interests ni the few 1 tion is over. The earth seems unsettled for went thru the travail of other wars and rev- The war has socialized England. Ger- must give way to the needs of the er along time. There are earthquakes of | lutions for over 50 years. The king of many and France had a large measure of _ After such an advance in radical think- greater or less severity | Spain, in many ways one of the — wisest state socialism before the war. The war is ing and doing there can never be a retreat So with this great eruption, this world of modern sovereigns, recently said the war socializing this country. to where we were before the war. What war. Things will not become static as soon | would cause an immense upheaval in all Phe proposition to take over the coal works in wartimes will also work in peace _ as peace is declared. The upheavals will be countries and future governments would mines and pool their product, to take over times. : felt long afterward lean toward a sort of socialism. the railroads and pool transportation, to | The march toward the goal of state con- i Governments will change form, dynas- This is precisely what the war has commandeer the steel mills and copper trol and state ownership has begun. sve a RAD AA ANAAD AAPA ARAD SPAR PALA PAP IPP | ae POPE a 8 RET RE = ) P oat SY 9 a TAR SoA lt ; 99 | Next Novel il} aden ID. IK."S 2’. Letters to the Editor : I} | “The Allison Pearls” | | - \) | BY EDWARD H, HURLBUT | COLYUM _ TRUE PATRIOTISM jhave the satisfaction of being the 3 1207 Sew ve. Ni Ue 1? BY LEWIS CARROLL \ ol ian . } Editor The Star: The letter by! prototype of true democracy. |S. W. Sutton, in The Star of July JOHN J. HEINEN, £ a OF SCRIPTS NORTHWES BAG bell Les _NEWwSPAPens ih teed ARAL ARO \; alas cae akin alaial seoniae , Preas Association | (Continued From Our Last Iesue) | perfectly idiotie!” And she opened) would be gtd gauche for her ood [Pe wae by oo Berne lige dosrg eo ago, are worthy of study by the LABOR AND CAPITAL niece a . "TE y ne dc nd went in carry it any farther. b ‘o be , nc sade ot The St " 2 The Sta ve just Entered at Seattic, Wash. Postoftic er | CHAPTER VY. Be sour and wen Se she set the tittle creature vessels, except|readers of The Star. This man is) Editor Th I ha _ — | The door led right into a large bi : truly patriotic, the true patriotism been reading your article, at so}! Pig and Pepper d felt quite relieved to PURE ferry boats, that | “4 r moath up te ar $3.60) or a minute or two she stood| kitchen, which was full of smoke | down, an See ites the hiv in the waters (DOM of love of his fellow men Strike Blame Where It Belongs, arrtef, city, 3 lltooking at the house, when sud-|from one end to the other. The| see iS tree ewey Qusuy Ee : cones Maw York | So much is being said and writ- and have been looking for som looking at the house, when ee a aitting on a three-| Wood. “It it had grown up,” she ou HM | sat auee naan anne eanrations fie te out Of vou cane a denly "a footmen:ia livery eame/Secness wes sitios on 8 raid to herself, “it would have giving this order |" d it p “gos 5 Pek ne . “ running out of the wood—(she con- | lekked “oo in ny: middle nursing made a dreadfully ugly child; but| aa naobunt Ol the | 4 ast, what is pasriotien is the labor situation on the Pad E sidered hin be footman be-|" baby; the cook was ms S ye 7 © pig, I leak of the news das “love o' e's country” | coas v9 elcome nvo y s! vatwe he wan in livery: otherwise,|the fire, stirring @ large cauldron tt mak rather 8 handsome pig. 1 leek of the news| crination, Our country ts the peo-| My father was a great lawyer M . }Judging by his face only, she would | Which seemed to be full of soup over other children she knew, who|Porshing’s men, (Not more than|Dl¢. How can we love our country Often have I heard bim tell of Ldn " aA peal « United| When we hate our neighbor, or coln’s speech, in which he sald that 00,000 people in the United) withhold our help and assistance he shuddered for the next war to from our own over-burdened fel-|come, which would be between cap- ce Seattle, the first American city to greet the American|have called him a fish)—and rap| “There's certainly too much PEP mignt do very well as pigs, and ission on its return from Russia, and proud of the dis-|ped loudly at the door with his| per in that soup!” Alice said | was just saying to herself, “If one States knew that Pershing’s men knuckles, It was opened by an-| herself, as well as she could for) oniy knew the right way to change| Does a German lose his tion, is mighty glad to welcome them aot este eee teas te ite wns ¢ |unasene Cue tum aay Sis a lithelemee oh « tererseerty |low men and women? Aye—"How | ital and labor. ; the American gateway to new Russia and the new tes | round face and large eyes lke | ‘There was certainly too much of| startled by seeing the Cheshire cat pia’ jean we love God, whom we have| Your article in today’s Star will f friendship in political as well as commercial relation, Seat-| frog; and both footmen, Alice no-||t in the alr, Even the Duchess sitting on a bough of a tree a fow! wo follow the slogan, “Carry It — eens if we do not love our/touch the hearts of all ger, PGs peculiarly interested in the findings of this commission, ticed, had powdered hair that! sneezed occasionally; and as for yards off. Home,” in buying goods, When we| oh her, whem we have seen? FU hand see it, and I hope you will con- ih nonnts ‘ong its notable mem-|curled all over their heads. She the baby, it was sneezing and! The cat only grinned when !t!hougnt a new lid yesterday after-|, Patriotism! A short time ago I tinue to print the truth as you have d by Elihu Root, and counting among its n f . Khe lid y saw a young girl, a shabby, pathetic | today N. M. CHOATE, a 4 ‘ 4 writer ‘elt very curious to know what it howling alternately without & MO-;saw Alice it looked good-natured, noon and the clerk asked, “Do you p 5 '. , A 3 . f Charles Edward Russell, famous economist and was all about, and crept a little | ment’s pause. The only creatures | phe thought; still, it had very long|\ont it delivered?” we replied,|/sure, Walking wearily, but faith ‘ancouver, B. C. The Star and sister papers. way out of the wood to Iaten in the kitchen that did not sneeze | claws and a great many teeth, #0/ <0 we'll wear it, Deliver the old| {uly back and forth before one of — They bear a message of cheer to the United States as} The Fish-Footman began by pro-| were the cook and a large cat! she felt it ought to be treated with| 5.9% 7 jthe downtown laundries, wearing| WANTS RATE ON CAR LINES hole at this time, for despite frequent disquieting rumors | ducing from under his arm a great| which was sitting qn the hearth| respect a pa pin Lg pa G ca age Editor The Star: The existing © the Russi blic, the American commission, | etter. nearly as largo as himself,| and grinning from ear to ear “Cheshire Puss,” she — begai “rhe women in the Ruseian| P*!t Wages for Laundry Girls,” or street car strike emergency brings Teports of the Russian republic, the American commis */and this he handed over to the| «please would you tell me,” said| rather timidly, “would you tell me,|.iny” writes B. R. T., “fight as words to that effect. I crossed over|home the following needs, for man, voices the opinion that out of it all will come) other, saying, tn a solemn tone,! ajice, timidly, “why your cat grins| please, which way I ought to walk /t)" They hed bese meeried & long | to tern © tir ca emereenens | Wai there. ie sumpatved: shi and order. \“For the Duchess An invitation jixe that?” | from here?” time.” So do the men. }to her, and thought, as I glanced (a) The city council, or others, to : Raat a iy: d coura »\ from the Queen to play croquet.” | as). . “ | “That depends a good deal on back upon the dmoping figure, that|{mmediately appraise the value of ha oes the nowe ar es cemuiteecion’ of tee The Frog-Footman repeated, in the! p.t% bee rt ol Gogg | whats peu wiak-te gu ta” wld eee 4 . |ebe stood: for tras petrlotiem, for|the Puget Sound Traction, Light ai same solemn tone, only changing! * | the Cat she stood for a principle, for a| Power Co.'s interests tn the city of 48 dear, who feared that a dream almost too good to be the order of the words a little,| She said the last word with such) «1 don’t much care where—" sald ANSWERED | monument that not only helped her,| Seattle, their revenue and operat ‘was about to be shattered. For whatever aid the Ameri-|“From the Queen. An tnvitation ®dden violence that Alice quite) aiiog |but helped her fellow workers allling expenses, etc. and then have n , i si for the Duchess to play corquet.” Jumped; but she saw in a moment! seppren jt doesn't matter which jover the city and, Indirectly, all|prepared and submitted a refe { "a have been pits to ohh tig Keepeieae to help preserve their} Then they both el Bc and ‘that it was addressed to the baby.| way you walk.” eald the Cat B over the United States endum to the voters of Seattle on 5 blic, the whole American nation is mightily indebted. their curls got entangled together, ? 824 not to her, so she took courage,| = 65 long as I get somewhere,” ~ A few blocks further, while wait-|the question of public ownership © Welcome, welcome, brother Americans. Seattle listens! Ajieq taughed so much at that 44 went on again. Alice added, as an explanation DK. ing on @ crossing, an auto passed,/of common public necessities (to : "4 to you. that she had to run back {nto the, “I didn't know that Cheshire cats| “Oh, you're sure to do that,” sald in the tonneau of which eat @ pros-|cover the above company in this ooo | wood for fear of their hearing her; | always grinned; in fact, I didn't) the Cat, “If you only walk long perous looking woman ostentatious-| instance)—within the next 30 days. ‘CHUYETSU STEAMSHIP CO. (Jap) declares a dividend of 2,000 and when she next peeped out, t knew that cata could grin.” emough.” ly knitting a gray sock. Patriotism?|This to test public opinion Gents in on the ground floor paid $2.50 per share. How per.) Fish-Footman was fone, and the) “ (Continued in Our Next Ieeue.) Perhaps so. But 1 wondered if the|know whether or not the voters heathenish. other was sitting on the ground | Duchess peters ntse knitter even noticed the weary,|consider it worth while to spend Alice did not at all like the tone near the door, staring stupidly up ‘This question comes from Mr.| Shabby little picket down the street, |the required money to operate , } | ‘OUR NEW ally, king of Siam, Is named Vagiravudh, and Is sald/into the sky jot this remark, and thought it|) |aA. C. Blazo, the well-known Ea-|0F if she were patronizing @ laun-|their own street cars, etc. @ a real lively person, domestically speaking. ghee Ment _timidly up to the would be as well to introduce some | MEATLESS are, {|e 0 Bee ee the | ary that stood for a living wase oy The present emergency calle —_—_—_— joor and knocked othe coal | { * and etter con jo min at one, big, cen \. CO oe “There's no sort of use in knock. | While she was trying to fix on one, |} DURING SUMMER {( Nviat does a war gardener do|&2d women employes, and meé-loperative and powerful common- ts Off to Flag of France ing,” sald the Footman, “and that | the cook took the cauldron of soup |} }\ when he ts tired?” |thought, after all, tee. ste sirl| people interests (nonpartisan) as- i'd |for two reasons. First, because | Off the fire, dnd at once set to y * < t picket was the real patriot sociation is needed to standardize I'm on the same side of the door! Work throwing everything within |?) REAL ECONOMY } wt ries eae 5 Fogger toe 7 ret Mr. Sutton’s quotations are clas-land foster equitable principles of » Millions of French flags are now flying in this country.|as you are: secondly, because| her reach at the Duchess and the lnurdenay docs when he ia tired, |stes. “Bats of the night of intellig-| municipal activity—in which every ons more are soon to fly, for the manufacturers are far/they're making such a noise in-| baby; the fireirons came first; | BY BIDDY BYE What does a war gardener do when | ence, member (under {ts constitution) d delivery on their orders. side no one could possibly hear| then followed a shower of sauce Not much will be saved by |i ts tired, Mr. Blazo?” giant is slowly but surely awaken-|shall have a voice and have atten- ” pans lates, and dishes. The nd \wak you.” And certainly there wa » Dl . the cook who le t Mr. Blazo then replies, “When a/|!08, and before that awakening This ogee and widespread display indicates the depth ® | Deche k “ice of th e 7 reaps most extraordinary nolse going on| Duchess took no notice of them) jes days to chance. France h red he Iie P sincerity of the American affection for the French repub-|within—a constant howling and |¢ven When they hit her; and the| two meatless days a week, beige ono wea Bo down | yell stand aghast. People's Interest club.” ont friend of America and the vanguard of democ-| sneezing, and every Bow and then | ref Pifenaplokrn lac By aed Monday and Tuesday, and A ‘Thra all this cheotio watripeat ot “mere be true to. = Europe. @ great crash, as if a dish or kettle rance has many a big lesson Should I wear brase Buttons on| War, sreed, pro! wron| mame, an wisely "The flags of most other nations represent a whim or a| bad been broken to pieces. whether the blows hurt it or not.) t teach America about con- |, gown that I wear to @ military hatred, injustice, comes clear and) might grow up to include 75 pet. : “Please, then,” said Alice, “how| “Oh! please mind what you're) serving food. The first ie this | hon?—Nellle. unmistakable, the “Chant of the/cent or more of the voters of the ey of some dead and gone ruler, or are composed of flags} am 1 to get in? doing!" cried Alice, jumping up| system of going without meat | xo never wear buttons at a hop.| Workers,” the demand for a Just/ctty and be able to sway all mu- if origin that were the ensigns of combined provinces| “There might be some sense in| and down fn an agony of terror.| on fixed days. Wear frogs. “| portion of what their toll produces. |nictpal elections and powerfully af- es. your knocking,” the Footman went | “Oh, there race og pga nose!”| The average family will not find} tik The mighty “Song of the zeae fect others. However, it should in- : jon, without attending to her, “if we #8 an unusually large saucepan) fault with meatless days in mid w |the true patriotism, born of justice / clude within its constitution very Mame flag of France speaks something far deeper and|0%,"ine door termes ce” Hat r|flew quite cloas by It, and very|iaminer, Hereafter the, wartime). Why 16 & dishonest jockey like |the trie Dette ete nowmen clear principles of true justice and greed and the gods of profit may ifi rtist?—H. P, J. ader than that. It speaks magnificent ideas of the eman-| snail sit here till tomorrow-—" | nearly carried it off | menus in this serion will be made|*"ne"vnte the’ diahonest jockey | MRS. F. E. LANTZ, [simple truth (which should be lation and progress of the whole human race. At this moment the door of the| “Here! you may nurse it a bit/out with meat substitutes on Tue#| ui, horses and the artist draws | 723 25th Ave. 8. | etrictly followed) and be so plain Blue, white and red are its colors in perpendicular bands | house opened, and a large plate |if you like!” said the Duchess days and Fridays fered to all that violation of principles © immortal tri-color of the French revolution | poets skimming out, straight at the | Alice, flinging the baby at her ie pce and — a HEIGHTS OF DEMOCRACY would be immediately recogni — iyi a i . = 4 | Footman’s head. It jast grazed his | she ke. “I must go and get! reakfast—Puffed rice and ber. y t th : Hi vents of/able under an ise. The blue signifies Liberty, the white signifies Equality) nose, and broke to pleces ‘against ready to play croquet with the| ries, creamed toast, coffee Base igoarye epien ins wee tay aie ie ur local labor FRAY ate FOLSOM, the red gnifies Fraternity. : ’ one of the trees behind him, | Queen; and she hurried out of| Dinner—Steak stuffed with| rare right awayt+F. T, C. troubles have proved once more — Liberty, Equality, Fraternity! It is the national motto of| "or next day, maybe,” the Foot-|the room, ‘Tho cook threw a try-| dressing, rolled and roasted: boiled)" Soidiern don't believe In long en-| that, altho in our polftical, eco NICK AND OCTOPUS ince, ‘the i irati i in| man continue Ing-pan after her as she went, but| potatoes and peas, lettuce an 8 -| Editor The Star: O : inspiration of its longyand gallant fight to main-| So)" there's no use in talking tol it just missed her onion salad, watermelon, and iced | ®*#ement nomie and social discussions, we fre oa: | Oe ae _ * | quently and with a certain predilec-|came up to the haunts of men with Questions Mr. E. 0. K, Cannot tion make use of devices and mot-|an eye and a nose for news, and he Answer |tos which came to life under the|swore, “By Gum! it is puzzling democratic institutions, the sign of its fire-tried loyalty to} nim,” ‘said Alice des, le democratic faith. coffee Supper—Ilam sandwiches, potato | peratel “he's | Alice caught the baby with some difficulty, as it was a queershaped _ Liberty, Equality, Fraternity—grander words never arf ttl: creature, and held out its| Salad, raspberry cream cake, toed) sia1y tell me if any of the re-| great French Revolution, we do not | when one finds there are two ro: ed human lips. | Gibson Girl to Wed || arms and legs in all directions hn NONDAY Jcent race riots were sed by |always grasp the real meaning the|to choose!” One road led down a i biciood | As soon as she had made out the Srehten — Cold clea corn | bookmakers failing to pi bets.— authors intended to convey, Democ-|into the Vale of Tears, where the roper way of nursing it (which | an to twist it up into a sort of/ Starch and milk, toast and coffee knot, and then keep tight hold of} Luncheon—-Cottage cheese, let its right ear and left foot, so as to| tuce sandwiches, cookies, tea. prevent its mmdoing itself) she car-|_ Olnner—Codfish hash, cornmeal ried it out into the open air muffins, beet salad, lemon ice. TUESUAY “If I don't take this cnild away =~ t with me,” thought Alice, “they're| Sreskfact—Frult, omelet, toast IF THEY'RE sincere allies, the Japanese might take the place f Russians on that Eastern front. But how the gods would laugh |) see the Japs saving Russia! |B. M. 8. racy, to their’ understanding, was| Workers toiled in the slough; and I sent my filvver to @ garage to | that the sovereignty of a nation was|the other was built on the workers’ have St reseated and when I paid | diverted from ono privileged class|bDiers, and was trod by the Chosen for the work the man receipted the | to the people at large; that the peo-| Few. | bill, Wasn't that nice of bim?—| ple, by this high authority and re-|_ “I think T shall try this here high RA | | sponsibility conferred upon them—| ad first,” said Satan, with bright, How many teeth are there in the |if I may express myself thus—would | Sparkling eye. “To see how these mouth of a river?—Miss Rose | become a nation of aristocrats, ev-| People live; I've a thirst. I know KERENSKI 1S at the front, but where’s Elihu Root? elp From “Highbrows” coffee. sure to kill it in a day or two WER ‘ Buddy = in his line, a nation of gen.|! shall learn if 1 try.” Luncheon—PDrown bread, iced ry man in his line, a ni of « ¥ r: bi - Wouldn't it be murder taJeave It\ > termilk. melo F | What is the best thing to do for 'tlemen in their conduct toward their} At the end of the day ‘twas a | In the good old days gone by it has been the custom, if |behind? She said the lant words|Uttermilk, melon, pte,|* Pain in a cedar chest?—L, J. W.| fellow-men on all occasions, at all| Startled Sate who fled from the the privilege, of the so-called lowbrows to poke fun at the out loud, and the little thing grunt-| string beans, cold slaw, boiled cus. times, and not a nation of ragamuf-|2!8h roadways; his asbestos hair ed highbrows. Frequently not only good-natured fun jed in reply (it had left off sneezing |ta@ tea. i "| Mr. E. D. K.'s Household Hints | fins, boors and snobs. was all singed from his pate; he produced at the expense of the highbrows, but good, | by this time) “Don’t grunt, wala)" WEDNESDAY Fingernils can be made pink by | When they advanced, in the face ort ge like ne = Be daze: “I 4 bri d ’ ce; “that's not at all a proper! gre i com flakes|Pounding them with a potato| of the world, their device of liberty, |t? was an ingenious brickbats were hurled as well. |way of expressing yourself.” |, ,areakfast coffee, | masher, | co ality and fraternity: thor intend:|® Fight onery devil in Hades; but War, however, is showing us that the highbrows can help great deal in ways that are valuable. One of the reasons this is that they have the time. Perhaps that is one of main reasons The baby grunted again, and| Luncheon— cheese, mar| Never throw away the husks or | ed to impart that, besides liberty for| ONS that road there existe a Alice looked very anxiously into) malade and tea. |shells of peas: Run them thru a! themselves, there should be liberty |°laue—why, my Home! they can its face to see what was the matter! Dinner—Meat loaf with rice,|f04 Chopper, dry them in an oven | in the same degree for all their fel-| S1¥@ me spades with it. There could be no doubt| cooked starchy vegetables, fruit|/#%4 use them for salad in the win- | jow.men; by liberty they did not in- Then with bated breath, and * ‘ that it had a very turn-up nose ea. ter. cae # |pale as grim death, Sate took a And the highbrows probably are getting a great deal of 2 much more like a snout than a real enind, tos. THURSDAY Never place vinegar {In a warm oti ad Mee i he eae Sauboned sitney. bis, ocateknas j out of the novelty of doing something really useful. nose; also its eyes were getting! Breakfast—Prunes and cream,|Place. It may turn sour, ged down to the lowest social level, | S!84, ave! to resign his sway to the Take the case of Montclair, N. J., for example. Montclair extremely small for a baby. | rice muffins, coffee A heavy weight placed on @ pan} tne jevel of hoodlums, but should be| Traction Octopus. |_ “If you're going to turn into a| Luncheon —Corn pudding, egg | pf dough will prevent it from rals-) raised to the highest level of civili-| nica pig, my de: said Alic@, seriously, | sandwiches, toed tea. ee m zation, where urbanity and courtesy | “Yl have nothing more to do with| Oinner— Vegetable and meat] Canvas shoes may be washed | would reign among men. loans aoe et eee ee you. Mind now!” The poor little| stew, cucumber and radish salad,|¥!th soap and hot water without | Canadh bas provided 414,402 voles By fraternity they understood a i thing sobbed again (or grunted,| blackberry cobbler and cream. Injury. Do not run them thru &/ close solidarity among men for the] tern scr eure Mullitary duty, ‘eng a highbrow towl. LW. PEDROSE, The women of Montclair probably are as well organized war work as any in the country. Practically the whole is on a war footing. These women are doing real wo -—not merely playing in nifty khaki uniforms os a th “Yr ioe 5 ye gah Breakf rondo 1 fd sito le bell ___| Keneral welfare of the people; that resarvisin'and lees ieee forthe by . ¢ ee ‘ ‘ ~ and they went on r some while reakfast — Molded cereal with Rea: ence ¥ oss 7 © They have placed a large number of beds in a local hos- socom bagel pany = Walle! orlig, task. cutie - differences among them should be gerial and naval services. settled in a manner becoming broth-| = ers, and not with arguments in the} A scheme for the protection form of bricks and other similar| vessels from tornedo attack con- | projectiles. | sists of a shower of whirling dises If we would bring our public Ife/ shot from special guns, which will in fdea closer to the great princi! turn the nose of the approaching ples of said revolution, we would torpedo. z or whatever in < a Y rd fo! | . i 1, pty “e } me r 3 jured ney have need for them.| MRS HENRY bL. GRUCE | Aiine wan just beginning to think|, Luncheon—Cream cheese with ve schooled themselves practically in home economy Mrs. Bruce is the famous “Gib-|to herself, “Now, what am I to do|rown bread, pickles or salad, tea. have got after the war garden problem in a sensible! son girl” and widow of Capt. Henry| with this creature when I get it]. Olnmner—Pea soup, creamed pota , They have furnished an unusual quantity of material |L. Bruce, eldest son of Lord Aber-| home?” when it grunted again so| toe, cheese souffle, tomato salad ; 7 ; : dhe « i ‘ fruit tarts the Red Cross and all manner of knitted comforts for sol-|44t¢ of England. She will be mar-| viole that she looked down into omiorts for sol | ried in London soon to Capt. John its face in some alarm. ‘This time SATURDAY and sailors. |M. J. Evans, of the Royal Welsh | there could be no mistake about it; |, 8reakfast—Bananas and cream When troops were occupying the town the women’s or-| Fusileers. it was @ pig, and she felt that {1|namon rolls, coffee. Mization furnished clerical help, automobile service for of-|—————————————______-—- = - Luncheon—Rye or corn meal bat §, portable typewriters for field use and other conven-| Peeing lone he dae le ie THE BANK s of that kind. | Dinner— Fish balls and rice They provided food for a large contingent of troops for vegetable salad, fruit o1 FOR YOUR ore than two days—all the food the soldiers had d x the | wi ys—a ¢ food the soldiers ha adil PS Ae oe ee eee : SAVINGS ; i Everybody {8 asking why Japan These Montclair women have done real work. They have} y Japan ; : sn't sent soldiers to the front the time and the money. They have been able to do| | Maybe Japan has a congress that NEW PANTAGES MATS., 2:30 NIGHTS, 7 AND 9 BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOON Suggestions for cold supper this hot weather thin 4 | Are you racking your brain for a new combination of |is debating the question pays 4 Te thing worth praising about these women is not that cold things for supper? Here isa meny that's cooling, AST Ci * AN 4 PER CENT HENRY BELLIT PRESENTS _ they have occupied their time, but that they have had the nutritious and inexpensive: Bismarck Herring, Cottage TE sood sé sa iy eeumett ensitit reed hil Cheese, Rye Bread and a nice cold bottle of Bevo. “In the Heart of Seattle's INTEREST 66 99 BusUal good sense to do sor ling sensible and worth while ||] Untike any other soft drink you ever tasted. Choicest Wholesale and Shipping . W ith their time. They might have been content to don Hops give just a touch of bitter to Bevo that is both from appetizing and satisfying — and which makes it a “Matty suits and look ®leasant. a Se August First th superior table beverage as well asa pleasing drink at Grand opera hit of the season, with a cast includ- JIM CAMERON, “taught with too many wives, has been sen-||| ll times. COMMERCIAL on all sums deposit- ee ie Peacock, Blanch 0 aoe includ d to service in the front trenches when he returns to France| Bevo—the all-year-‘round soft drink. SAVINGS ed on or before & beth de om anche ormson, Albert his New Brunswick regiment. Thus would Justice make widowa| the flock. SAN DIEGO'S rushing the style Sold in bottien only and bottied exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST. Louis TRUSTS Parr and a Metropolitan chorus, August Fifth GuaRDIAN | eee! ~=MOR i BANK OR® SAVINGS: IORAN & WISER Cor, Firat Ave, at Columbia st, Other Big Features—10c and 20c She’s got a Chinese policeman. THERE’S ONLY $27,000,000 of pork in the rivers and harbors |, but just a mere rind of pork is enough to make the United States it blood to get at it, TO ARRIVE at should be a | appropriaten that battalion of women igned the work of shooting the Russian de-

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