The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 6, 1917, Page 6

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Rntered at By mail, out of city, one year, 15.50 ow forLumber Peace Seattle Star Seattin, Wash mouths, My carrier, Jann mattor per month up te @ | | | For the first time since the lumber strike has been called, employers and em- pyes in that industry will come together Tuesday in th lay be the beginning of the end of a serious situation, % the | State and the nation. Let no one carry any chips into that conference! Peacej has got to result from it—or, Mational shipbuilding program will be set back a whole year. as Dr. Suz the same room. That it hope of the whole zzallo has pointed out, the Even more dis- @strous may be the effect of a strike upon the airplane program. If it had not dawned before upon those engaged in the lumber controversy at the nation is actually threatened with destruction from an unscrupulous toe, e Root commission Saturday must have made that clear. In the face of this mace, neither lumbermen nor lumber w orkers can refuse to be reasonable in order at this nation may ‘be able to fight with all of its might for its self-preservation. Be reasonable! That is all the nation asks. | It is a splendid concession to reason that brings the employers and em-| oyes together tomorrow. Employers, misguided and led by stubborn advisers, | of mutual conference between themselves, employes and mediators, are now The fine work, so auspiciously begun, is worthy Success, and that means a settlement of the strike. the right path. a Stick to it. ‘Action! Action! Action! Secretary McAdoo dynamited the senate by warning it the war revenue bill should provide for five billions in ndditio to the proposed Really it is not surprising Se the figures. New billion Necessities six hundred and seventy that the secretary has had to have arisen, the dozens departments have made their estimates, and the secretary had a view of the total The unfortunate feature about the matter is that all the tt by house and senate on their divergent war rev bills has been wasted, and it will be many more weeks American taxpayers can get any estimate as to what taxes are to be. and, if long continued, to say nothing about the ¢ I | The hope of the nation, if not indeed the ability of congress to break its rec i Of war revenue taxation without + nized and falling back Such delay means paralysis of enter lead to hard war preparation of civilization, lies d by settling the ay. With Russia and the United v inevitably ect u t anarchy, anarchical, financially speaking, the allies are surely fitled to “the blues.” Patriotism demands immediate action democracy demand that the burden be placed upon those | them able to bear it. “Will a great wave of pat into action NOW? . Alice in Wonder BY LEWIS CARROLL eee = From Our Last Issue) felt that this could not be so she tried another ques- “What sort of people live here?” that direction,” the Cat said, fts right paw round, “lives ; and in that directio: the other paw, “lives a Hare. Visit either you like; both mad.” I don’t want to go among d people,” Alice remarked. “0 can't help that,” Cat; “we're all mad here. You're mad.” do you know I'm madt™ od said I'm " must be,” said the Cat, “or ‘wouldn't have come here.” . didn’t think that proved it However, she went on: how do you know that you're begin with,” said the Cat, “a mot mad. You grant that?” Suppose 80,” said Alice. 4 “Well, the: the Cat went on, ‘it see a dog «rowls when it's Sry, and wags its tail when it’s |. Now, I growl when I'm and wag my tafl when I'm . Therefore I'm mad.” call {t purring, not growling,” Alice. 2 C it what you like,” said the “Do you play croquet with “I should like {t very much,” said ‘ “put I haven’t been tnvited ” "You'll see me there,” said the for the jitney busses? Sell and vanished. Alice was not much surprised at she was getting so well used queer things happening. While she was still looking at the place where it had been, it suddenly ap- again. “By-the-bye, what became of the said the Cat. “I'd nearly to ask.” turned into a pig,” Alice an- ‘Bwered very quictly, just as if the Cat bad come back in a natural cf thought it would,” said the ‘Cat, and vanished again. Alice waited a little, half ex | Peeting to see it again, but tt did ‘ appear; and after a minute or 2 she walked on in the direction which the March fiare was said to Iva ‘Te seen hatters before,” she Justice, humanity riotism and democracy sweep said to herself; “the March Hare will be much the most interesting; and perhaps, as this is May, it won't be raving mad—at least, not to mad as ft was in March.” She had not gone far before she came tn sight of the house of the March Hare. She thought {t must be the right house, because the chimneys were shaped like ears and the roof was thatched with fur It was so large a house that she did not Ifke to go nearer till she had nibbled some more of the left hand bit of mushroom, and raised herself to about two feet high Even then she walked up towards it rather timidly, saying to herself, “Suppose it should be raving mad after all! I almost wish I had gone to see the Hatter instead!” There was a table set ont under @ tree in front of the house, and the March Hare and were having tea at it. A Dor mouse was eltting between them, fast asleep, and the other two were using it as a cushion, resting their elbows on {t, and talking over ite head. “Very uncomfortable for the Dormouse,” thought AWce: “only, as it's asleep, I suppose it doesn’t mind.” The table was a large one, but the three were all crowded to gether at one corner of {t “No room! no room!” they cried out, when they saw Alice coming. “There's plenty of room!” said Al- ice indignantly, and she sat down in @ large arm-chair at one end of | the table. “Your hair wants cutting,” sald the Hatter. He had been looking at Alice for some time with great curiosity, and this was his first speech You should learn personal remarks,” Alice said, with some severity; “it's very rude.” The Hatter opened his eyes very wide on hearing this, said was, “Why is a raven Iike a writing-desk?” “Come, we shall have some fun now!” thought Alice. “I'm glad they've begun asking riddies—t be-| Heve I can guess that,” she added aloud. “Do you mean that you can find out the answer to it?” said the March Hare. “Exactly so,” said Alice “Then you should say what you mean,” the March Hare went on. “I do,” Alice hastily replied; “at least—at least I mean what I say Juice of two lemons made into creamy lotion can be used to bleach, whiten and soften the skin. Make a quarter pint cheaply! The beauty lotion, which is be-| skin coming #0 popular throughout the ) country, is easily prepared by any one, and a whole quarter pint of | it doesn’t cost any more than a small jar of the common, ordinary old creams. _ Add the juice of two fresh lemons ‘to three ounces of orchard white > and shake well in a bottle, Strain _ the lemon juice two or three times » through a fine cloth 0 no pulp gets into the lotion, then it will keep | fresh for months. Regardless of | What price you pay or how highly ertised, there is nothing else ily more meritorious in beauti- softening and clearing the As a tan and mover, also to remove oiliness, freckles, and sallowness, lemon juice has no rival, Massage it into the face, neck, and arms once or twice each day, and just see if it doesn’t bring out the roses and hid den beauty! Lemons have always been used to bleach the skin, but pure lemon juice is too highly acid, therefore irritating. Try it! This sweetly fragrant lo. tion will speak for itself. Any drug store or toilet counter will supply the three ounces of orchard white at very little cost, and the grocer will supply the lemons. blemish re the Hatter | not to make | but all he| you think | at first ignoring all of-|} FOR JITNEY SERVICE Editor The Star: Did tt Jocour to you that the jitney question is an issue that can easily solved by labor Itself? Why not t Mutual laundry and other by labor o ganizations co-operate and issue 150,000 sharea of stock as labor insurance for the fitney busses? Sell the stock to the laboring class at $10 per share. Let all unions take & dlock of stock, to be disp to Its members on at say $ nonth until t To make the stop speeding, a serted that an speed it forfeit a said bond ever bus be} property owr hare. stock ts paid for, | y more safe and} s@ must be in} car exceeding the city limits shall ection given by any | in the pr LEH Aluminum utensils can be bright | ened by boiling tomato parings in Robert M. Cranmer, a chemist of iPenn Yan, N. Y (menting with hay as a food for humans. Next Novel “The Allison Pearls” | BY EDWARD H. HURLBUT | M ls |—that’s the same thing, you know.” “Not the same thing a bit!” sald the Matter. “Why, you might Just as well say that ‘I see whet | eat’ ls the same thing as ‘I eat what I seo'!” “You might just as well # added the March Hare, “that ‘I ike what I get’ is the same thing as ‘I get what I Hke'!” and could rem n dropped er all she bout ravens and writing-desk wasn’, much The Hatter was the first break the silence. “What day the month is it?” he saif, turning | to Alice. Ho had taken his watch | out of his pocket, and was louking at it uneasily, shaking it every pow and then, and holding it to his ear. Alice considered said, “The fourth.” “Two days wrong!” sighed the Hatter | Alice had been looking over his/ shoulder with some curfosity “What a fun wal she re| marked. “It 8 the day of the| month, and doesn't tell what} o'clock it is!” | “Why should it?” muttered the} Hatter. “Does your watch tell you what year it is?” Ot course not,” Alice reptied, | very readily; “but that’s because it | stays the same year for such a long time together.” | “Which 1s just the case with | mine,” salf the Hatter. Alice elt dreadfully puzzled The Hatter’s remark seemed tc her to ha no sort of meaning tr it, and yet it certainly English “1 don't 4 and you,” she eaid; as v0) she could Have 1 guessed the riddie yet Hatter said. No; I give it up,” Alice replied “What's the answer?” “I haven't the slightest Mea,’ the Hatter. “Nor I,” said the March Hare. Alice sighed weartly. “I think | yon might do something better with the time,” she sald, “than wasting It in asking riddles that have no an sewers,” “Tf you knew Time as well as | | do,” said the Hatter, “you wouldn't talk about wasting ft. It's him.” “I don't know what you mean, eald Alice. “Of course you don't!” the Hat ter sald, tossing his head contermp tuously. “I dare say you never jeven spoke to Time!” “Perhaps not,” Alice cautiously replied; “but I know I have to beat |time when I learn muste.” “Ah! that accounts for it,” said the Hatter. “He won't stand beat ling. Now, if you only kept on good |terms with him he'd do almost ar |thing you liked with the clock. For instance, It’s always six o'cl | now.” | A_bright idea came into Alice head, “Is that the reason so man |teathings are put out here?” she jasked “Yea, that's it,” sald the Hatter, |with a’sigh. “It's always teatime, jand we've no time to wash the |things between whiles.” “Then you keep moving I suppose?” paid Alice. | “Pxactly so,” said the Hatter; |“as the things get used up.” | But when you come to the be. ginning again?” Alice ventured to ask. “Suppose a little, and} j wan ite the round, we change the sub. the March Hare intorrupted, yawning. “I'm getting tired of this. I vote the young lady tells us a ator ‘I want a clean rupted the Hatter; one place on,” (Continued in Our Next issue) J cup,” inter- “let's all move AFAIK LAY ABH UAT PGT ENED” Ri dP the first American atrocity )] Kimba STAR—MONDAY, AUG. 6, 1917. PAGE 6 First American Atrocity Is Abolition of the Pie BY WINONA WILCOX out an 8, O, &. A hint of the first great national | teh!" war horror comes from the Middle For Kansas may become a plolees Weet. Kansas, so eafely situated | state, between coast and coast, originates| Her council of defense recom | mende that all pie timber be divert Already the men of Kansas send | ed to other uses for the duration of “Help, or we per Sees) He mildly inquirtd, “What is pie foi-?" | DANISH WOMAN. |=: ed so much from inflammation. Now, nobody doubts the patrio | ism of the native Kansan, Bo doesn’t this look Ike another of those German spy plots? Only the Teutonic mind could concetve of a plan which would #0 completely destroy the peace of 4 America; or could stage such a con spiracy right in the middle of our Tells Everybody What fate tana, doubtions with pald propa Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- £24!#t# to spread it all over these . free states, even unto the mother etable Compound Did for} jana of pic, New England | Her. Why discuss Mberty further? = | What are censorship, conscription, Chicago, Il.—"Tt gives me great! OF & free press, when the existence pleasure to let others know that 1|f Our sacred ple is threatened? — | improved in, Some say suffragiets started the health with the, movement to abolish ple. The mil- rat bottle of itants reasoned, it i# hinted, that Lydia BE, Pink. congress could not be harassed ham's Vegetohle more effectively than by calling the ompound; after) American woman, the w ‘s moat taking two bot-| famous plemaker, off the job. tea Iam entire-| To be sure, man eats too much ly well, Before pie, After one full meal, he innists aking, I could on eating another in the form of not do any kind rich crust and sweetened fruit or of work without custard. And perhapa we might pain in ™Y/avold a war famine by cutting all desserts from our menus. had headaches, was always tired | 4 out, why, comintt the strocte ml and had no appetite. Words cannot) > express my gratitude for the good | lor), Lempert Begg gpd het your medicine has done me, an4/ ro igrco d dure | through me to my family, 1 recom. | | mend Lydia B. Pinkham’'s Vegeta-|_ When someboody remonstrated ble ¢ round to women suffer. with a noted author for eating pic « ar female troubles, particu kfast, he mildly inquired, “Wha larly to Danish women.”—MR3S, !* pie for?” META DAMGAARDMATZAN, 2137, It has been left for war to dis-| Ave., Chicago, Il clone the reason for pie—porhaps It is positively true that Lydia E | it is part of the great German pre Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with dis placements, Inflammation, ulcern tion, tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, bdokache, that bearing-<down | feeling, indigestion, and nervous) prostration. set this republic by the ears, to din rupt the nation, to swamp our food hill tn congress by centering the at-) tention of the common people on the! perils of the ple aftuation. Again we must look to England for | expertence, She stil! feeds her Tom- | mies on Jam, “plum or apple.” War) | wisdom, We must never deprive) our Sammios of pie, at least as long! as they are at home, where mother can feed them. And ft in eafe to say we never will Tho all Kansas women go to jail $10 to $100 for it, Kansas will never be a ple loos state. Man likes ple. Furniture, Pianos, House- hold Goods, Storage Receipts, Live Stock, Etc. All transactions held strictly confidential, If not convenient to call, write or phone and our representative will call at your residence Sanders & Company 10084 L. C. SMITH BUILDING Phone Elliott 4662. QUALITY, ECONOMY AND DURABILITY IN DENTISTRY a Have you thought of the great strides that are being made tn the BCIENCE OF DENTISTRY, by the introduction of Modern Palniess Methodet The Mational Dentists have found a means of rendering the operation of extracting, filling, crowning teeth as painless as the removal of a shoe from the foot, and we do it without the alight- est dangor to the most delicate patient. You will heag this expression almost every day tn our of- fices: “Why, doctor, is that all there ts to it?” The advantages of being able to do your work without pain mean quicker, safer and easier treatments—-BETTER WORK AND LOWER FEES. Giving you Better Work at Lower Fees is what has built for this office its enviable name and following. WE ARE PLATE SPECIALISTS We make Gold Pilates, and until now they have been the ideal plate; but, owing to the almost prohibitive cost, they never became very popular. Now, however, we can of fer you a Plate that combines the virtues of a Gold Plate with a price that 1s reason- able, This Plate (like the Gold. Plate) is cool, light, sanitary, adaptable, giving you that inspiring feeling of naturalness; you may bite, chew and smile with perfect confidence and comfort. They are made of a new material, very similar to aluminum, called DentaMoy, The cost is very little more than a good rubber plate. The added comfort and eatiefaction are beyond comparison, SEE SAMPLES, $25.00 RUBBER PLATES $15.00 GENUINE TRUBYTE TEETH (Recognised as the world's best artificial teeth) set on rubber base, We guarantee our plates to stay in position and give per fect service. If you value your watch, Haynes repatr it. Next | theatre.— Advertisement. let Liberty 718 First Ay Union Bleck 16.00 wet of tooth or & $26.00 wot These prices in- without NATIONAL, DENTISTS Examination and Esti- mations Free. N. W. Cor. Fourth and Pike Phone Main 3256 Chew it after every meal M.A. GOTTSTEIN |(Afga FURNITURE CO. 4 eS SEATTLE'S POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS ATERE BUCK'S RANGES 1514 to 1520 Second Ave. Near Pike OGTERMOOR MATTRESS BUCK’S UNION-MADE $80 3.Fuel Combination © AND UP AND UP EASY TERMS EASY TERMS Saves Worry and Work Saves Time and Expense CUTS Most Successful Combination Range Manufactured Uses With Equal Success Either Gas, Coal or Wood Changed in a few seconds to the fue? handiest at the time. No complicated mechanism to bother with. Nothing to get out of order. All parts accessible—casy to keep clean. Biscuits perfectly baked with gas in 10 min- Ce ct takes up only floor space. A cool kitchen on Dur- ute 27x44 inche hot days—comfortably warm in winter. able, beautiful, economical, efficient complete YOUR OLD STOVE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE SPECIAL NOTICE! For the purpose+of co-operating with the home- furnisher during the present high cost of living, the following terms on homefurnishings will pre- vail until further notice: $ 50, $100, $150, $200, $250, $300, Store Hours Business Hours at This Store Are From 9 a.m. to 6 p. m. Every Day Including Saturdays $ 4.00 $ 5.00 $ 7.50 $10.00 mo. mo. nothing down, $1.00 week, nothing down, $1.25 week, $ 5.00 down, $1.75 week, $10.00 down, $2.50 week, $12.50 down, $3.00 week, or $12.50 $15.00 down, $3.50 week, or $15.00 We lavite the Accounts of All Reputable and ‘Trustworthy Homefurnishers SOLE AGENTS: BUCK’S RANGES BUCK’S HEATERS PUL ¥ Refrigerators, Gan Ranges, Garden Hore Mowers, Go-Carts, Rugs, Bedding, etc, « xecounts any time, without the usual first Tools, Lawn to customers’ Garder OSTERMOOR MATTRESSES paredness, planned decades ago, to —— “The Fiavor Lasts’? We might advertise WRIGLEY’S as the “dentifrice-without-a-brush.” For it cleanses the teeth and gums—it pleasantly sweetens the mouth—it FIGHTS ACIDITY. It brings a wholesome fresh- ness to the palate that makes the whole day lighter and brighter. Needless to caution you to get WRIGLEY’S, the filtered, the clean, gum. For millions have made it “WORUINT LEALFLAVO® their positive choice, having tried others. JUICY FRUIT] eee SP So, if you forgot your tooth- brush this morning, why, Wrigley a bit! THE FLAVOR LAS UBLEMINT V GT LLT ADEE

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