Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
|THE SEATTLE STAR] Near NORTHWEST LBAG | | yoar $3.60 joo of the United Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice a» Second-Class Matter, Mail, out of city, 356 per month ap to 6 mos By carrier, city, 806 a mo 6 mom $1.90 oh Phone Mate 600, Prtyate \HE HAS LANDED AT LAST Se Extra! Bryan is re-elected president and Bible conference. . WE’VE JUST GOT TO SAY IT of Winona assem say its rivals, has set an impossible precedent in the This may be treason, but—the sight of a six-foot khaki ing of port of New York tem- d here twirling an I8-inch swagger stick strongly sug pecerlixs ; anaee Yifine ermany announces a is the origin of the “Off” in Officer super-Deutschiand, with a & * cruising radt sufficient to VE TELLS’EM! yam peg op Rival shipyards blame Skinner & Eddy for all this wage 5. German/papers anngunce ; 4 rn A } national “Wate” is turning ble because Skinner & Eddy granted the shipbuilders’ new from Grea Britain to Amer demand August 1, when the others refused it. This! jca HERE’S A\ HEADLINE MAY READ\ ANY DAY |}; What Will Happen When U-Boats and Siiltitaned Strike at U. S.? News Dispatches Say Day of NEW YORK, Sept. 23.—Does Germany plan & naval and aerial k on New York, the “solar America”? sin late news feving such on aidpatches for | attayk ts possible 1 and British scout\eruisera engage in bat tle In the North sea BAtish officers an nounce belief German fleet is seeking td evade blockade and reach Atjantio, 3. Submariqe reported off this coast, wilting In clos German Acceppihe th facts as Indica it is paying. Still, one can’t help but admire bluff old Dave Rogers, pral manager at Skinner & Eddy’s, who, when called back lashington by the shipping board, vigorously announced gentlemen there assembled that he considered the wage his men “fair and equitable,” and said his company @ very well afford to pay it, thank you Tf there were more general managers like Dave Roge’ would be less strike talk AVE—BUT DON’T HOARD SAVE YOUR MONEY! ‘Save every penny you can get hold of. Cut down everywhere. Salt away the cash But don’t hoard it Hoarding and saving are not alike. Saving is the accumulation of money and giving the ty a chance to operate. It is putting your money into ding money means putting it away in a hole in the d, where it can do no good. ’ 5 Every resource of this big nation is needed to win the} } where it will do most good. le ad tions pfiat Germany may plan a seadnd alr raid on this elty WHAT WOULD SUCH AN AT TACK MEAN has ent ean, correspondent whet It wou fro ninent a os , Inventor of the sut ; Rear Admiral Rob ert heronautic expert, and Henry A, Wae Wood, one of the nation's fokemost airplane authorities 1 possibilitiqs of this raid have been written fn the form of an actual @legraphic dis patch describing |the country's THIS WIRES MAY CARRY ANY 18 A STORY THE DAY: | - e NEW YORK, pt. 24—A fleet of German war and mer | ~ chant super-eubmarin letting loose » flock of airplanes, which, like vultures, tore at the city’s tt means every dollar is needed. Every dollar must some useful purpose. | RVATIONS NO man think he ls loved by any man when he loves no E DECREES skirts are to be narrower as well! as shorter) Well, If they make "em short enough they can cut them a ‘as they please and women will still be able to walk. | COLUMBUS hotel cat fell 13 stories. No, not in the least. You! to know without asking. THE Swedes don’t look out, they'll have the rest of the won them Scandiknavians. | RCK ONCE sald It takes two men to drink enough beer one man drunk. What would he say to our less-than2-per-cent SENATE war revenue bill neglects to tax such necessaries ry, tires, picture films, musical instruments and insurance ESTION OF TIME Bw soon will the Germans raid New York from ¢ sea best American authorities on sea and air figh n telling us for months we must expect such a raic is nothing impossible, or even difficult, about it in When the Deutschland came and went with her indise, when the U-53, war submarine, paid her respects Germans to bring the war to the shores of America oved. has not this nation felt in her own mansion the Of war? AVhat has been lacking? Not the means Spirit. any saw England require more than two years to oth feet into the war. She expected America to take The kaiser and his advisers conceived the shrewdest ito be the restraint of military measures against Amer the hope that Americans would not take the war seri and would be enemies only nominally, instead of with ous reality. scheme didn’t work. The American to put in best licks. This nation what it took England two years and m lish colonies have not yet accomplishec ermany knows now it is war to the knife, "s knife is drawn and is sharp. Can started did in spirit two and that mpede terror they be disaffected by bringing German terrorism to our ‘Americans know they cannot. But the kaiser must try i is in the last ditch. : WThe capital has warned the nation that the German spirit ict suffering and damage on this continent is no longer long will it be before the wires carry the news of a raid on New York? . Harvey W. Wiley Also Puts O. K. on Rogers’ Baking Powder A bulletin issued by Good Housekeeping Bureau Food, announces that the Bureau has tested ogers’ Baking Powder and has endorsed it. Dr. ey W. Wiley, who became famous through his fight for pure foods when he was chemist for the United States Department of Agriculture, is director of the Bureau. This endorsement and that of the Westfield Board of Health, of which Professor Lewis B. | Allyn is chemist, are advice from unprejudiced “tational experts to all housewives that Rogers’ aking Powder deserves to enter their homes : Quoting from the bulletin of the Bureau, the examination of a product before passing upon it pis as follows: “A sample of the food product or Aoilet preparation purchased in the open market is "analyzed and otherwise tested for purity, nutritive ) value and general wholesomeness. The label and » other printed matter are also examined for claims Wegarding the product.” B Rogers’ Baking Powder is not only wholesome and Miuitritious, but it is also economical. You can buy it of your grocer for 25 cents a pougd. No baking pow Pi Poder at any price has higher leavening power. It is _ made by the Rogers Company of Seattle and Tacoma | section before daylight this morn- port and then sank shipping off the coast, the ability} , and what} can war-making where softness failed? It is the next} i card. jean troops are in France. More are mobilizing very vitals and bombed its big- gest skyscrapers, raided New York harbor and the business ing. A loss of life already officially placed at nearly 2,000, and prop- erty damage estimated at over $50,000,000, bring home to Amer- leans today what real war m 1,000 Ar booked to | ¥@ Sreat p sail for France mor were torpedoed and sunk |- oe almost a total loss of life Scores of smaller craft, incl: oastwise freight American packet, torpedoed or set on burning off South elthe »y bombs or floats The Flatiron building ts in ruins, The tower of the Singer bullding has fallen, and at least one side of the famous Woolworth bullding will have to be rebuilt. A chance bomb Shattered one of the downtown subway loops entirely blocking subway traffic below Herald A hair's breadth, and the en tire downtown »# ay system would have been flooded > From sea and air the U-boats |!s and their air vultures showered |!° | death and destruction upon New York. The city was not pre pared for the sudden deluge of death | Since the announcements that heavy the the successful wees of U. 8 French front rmans into atory action, steps to New York, the nation’s center, from naval and aerial at tack had been rushed But the present world bust ness center was still far from the dispatch of troops had goaded desperate to perfection of the London air de fense system which the tish | misste tw months ago outlined T 8. attleships lay the outh of t bh “ de | stroyera were stationed within, but the London high-angle gun de. fenses were lacking an some of the searchlights | ly In were no e equate and unorganized Miles of steel nets, stretch ed across the harbor mouth and the entrance to Long Island sound, were apparent ly cut like cheesecloth by the new German shearing de vic Ten war submarines joined tn the destruction within the har- bor, and all but three escaped. | Beat accounts are that four combined merchant-war submers- fbles, of the Deutschland type, but armed, came to the surface far off the coast at nightfall and set free over 20 warplanes, #0 built with collapsible wings as to be easily transported and quickly assembled Explosive and ignition bombs and floats of burning ofl worked a havoc that oan never be told of all harbor shipping, with a loss of several hundred lives CATARRH GERMS EASILY KILLED By Breathing Into Throat, Nose and Lungs a Pure Antiseptic Air ve catarrh and want to u must kill the germs disenne wn way of destroy to, breathe in our none pleasant, (pre and fun s of y 4 the Hi t through which Bar other leading and vicinity are time you in= (on membranes ated air which will not 6 all the awelling and infl n and open your ¢ a stopped-up alr it he f the t omel b that tt jon the positive guarantee money paid will be ul resulta are n ite use funded if suc t secured from Advertisement, | Editor's Mail BOY scouTs Why can easily his treater Who STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 25, 1917. EXTRA! 2,000 KILLED IN RAID ON NEW YORK © YOU NOW Here's artist’s picture of devastation in New York harbor and business district German air and « from such conservative and eminent authorities ae Simon Lak “TOeA FOR 6 Editor The Star the Boy Beouts when they go on a hike, to pl fow needs of fruits, b ennial Gowers in a little hole they with their Alpen prod cks? mann not ask “ Girl oo rries or per J. KB STANDLEY, “Old Curtosity Shop.” CUT THIS OUT If you kn bied with ad nolaee of ord wt this formula nnd u may a ywime. form atarrh 8h trial ir Druggtet able and add 1 and hand to be driven down « the lungs ch is used ex lamp English tutional treat pecially « here who } climate con one strength to ft ‘ uld give Advertiae E, N. FURMAN teaches bookkeeping, civil service, ad- | vanced grammar, shorthand, Northwestern Shorthand Reporting School Arcade Bldg. Just Printers 1018 THIRD Charactorizes every transact! or Pata on Accounts, Subject Cordidily ND AVE, our le iavings Accoun Invited. AND methods n and our cus. d every cour- t with sound lust. MAIN 1043 PAGE 6 Germans’ Retaliation Is Near % 7} aide , Submarine inventor, Rear Admiral Robert ag cause. The drawing ¥ based on data csiiiilied from estimates Cc} i Henry A A A. Wise V Wood, leading aeropiane authorities. DO SQUARE HEADS MOVE WORLD? Noted Character Analyst Says They Do; He Points Out Cases | | CLEVELAND, ©. Sept. 25.2-Men| witted, analytic brain. Roosevelt) ed men are revolutioniste, . | with square heats move the world!|must have something to do, and| “Typical of men ey roast | So says William Judson Kibby,|when he has something to do, ev-| heads is Taft him - . 2 ——@| noted character analyst erything and everybody must get |no physical exertion. They are the ’ vINtS Look at the heads of the men|out of his way judicial type who think and direct.” By Rerten Breler active today—Lioyd George, Von) “Lioyd yee is Teddy in the bg Hindenburg, Roosevelt, Villa. No-| English, He'll show England a 6, what a glorious result in a | Deed! Mat it cant be se We and they would de-| sure thereby He was so much alive! | He wae all fire and glow, Hie young blood seemed to drive Thiru his seine in » glerious leaping feed, eyes danced rr . down in the ! the bloom ef bis red youth Pore eyes glaned and bis blood cones and Tora ‘im his Hifelese veins? ‘Vet we must think of him ee; of the Jown to him dank and cold. Jammy ened, was alwaye @ chap whe leved the In the gravevard Hat Lean’, f © Lmagine Blin, He wae alt life, ail Tiseue and heart nerve And the thought of him brings ral And the spell of hie fancy, rife With savor and jor of life. How shall we think of bie As Moodiens and still met grim, Whe once was alive, agiow? Hat it can’t be sof eee | The solution of the coal problem, says Doc Garfield, will be principal ly in the hands of the people, In which respect it fs m like the one. and shoe problems. eee the Ballard reports a woman who re fused to knit sweaters, wristlets or socks, She says she'd rather wash dishes see | There are a lot of girls who are ng on airs when they should be ng on clothes o8e g down let the we hear, te soir ust have * get cold ee Somebody =m The French are amateurs at cam ouflage They could take lessons |from Beatt® bootleggers “Altho born side,” says § “Miss Brady is a New Yorker.” oe gerald tella us farm produce cheap prices t# to drive your auto to thg farm houses on the unpaved| roads, avoiding the paved roads, a the prices there are high, Fooled again, We re mber having voted for a bond issue for paved roads because somebody told us good roads would reduce the H. ©. L, acrosa the Jersey) n Whisperings,| born and bred | Councilman Fit way to buy th at Banner” 1s) We expect to “The Star-Spangled now 103 years old be able to repeat the first stanza from memory by the time is it 113.) | eee | Our tdea of a real optimist fs the man who trfed to solve folks think Is a mayoralty dilemma by proposing that Hi Gill resign. . 7-8 ser?) Maybe Bill would quit fight jing and let our mmies come back home, ff he were asked in a nice, |mentlomanly way Anyhow, Bill would be Just as likely to resten as Hi eee Wonder what the German text books in use in Seattle schools | may have to # about Ambassador Von Bernstorff, retired. eee Private Matter Is a member of the national army and Miss Fuzzy Couch a ographer. * what some | Why doesn't he try ft on the kaf-} tice their aquare beads, square set jaws, small slit) and virile faces heads, joven “Von Hinde is typical of whose whole dynamic execution. expedition. men ¥ hia head like a Hon. nO lead, bat roars from his chest nburg.” the life does not t aggressive He, se Kibby, man ie drive, like all alk from Roosevelt is even a better type. He not only 4 but plans while! enem “Men with long heads are think- President son is typical of the mental motive the man who reasons and talks | thing “The ers @ evo high fore-| thing or two “Villa is a natural born leader He 1s childlike to the poor, and to | jhis own people, but ruthless to bis les. nd out, lutionists; idealints. longheaded men are the squarehead- \Unsightly Hair eMirgele Day Debivecie by Wil- |! Soman ones Atsappotnts. Star want ads are the answer to every want. a | The Food Problem Solved lected by Staten, does.” ints know, cheese an the truest Dr. following Cheek Are 1K 9. Jit will “FOR SALE—Twin beds; | one almost new. Adv. It cer Yainly has been a cold summer, Bush Leaguer Will Write Real War Song By United Press Tenaed Wire CHICAGO, 25.—George M. | Cohan, who made the American flag famous, declared today that it | America produces a real war song be written by some “bush | leag composer rather than an| inmate of “'Tinpan Alley.” arrived here from New York with Wm. Bryant and Steve Cohan Hig Magazine, your Food Commi His answer, Ladies’ Home Journal, is cereals and milk One pound Butter, costing. Dalry: FOODS loner Herbert C. Hoover, If you would practice true economy, com- pare the following food values and prices. Then read the statements of Food Commis- sioner Herbert C. Hoover, and Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, given below: Be President Wilson for the great task published of conserving the food supply was asked the in buttermilk o of the following question the is Intter might we! the luncheon table much oftence than United “We should use milk aplenty, should we not?” September appear it Hoover knows, as many other food econom that the generous. use of more milk, id other sense. question: answer, published in advises th dairy foods fh substitution for the more expensive foods is economy in Harvey W. Wliey, one of the greatest food authorities in the world, was asked the “Please enlighten me as to what to eat so as to make my present wages have a greater pur- chasing power.” od Housekeeping 6 use of whole “If. you have children family; @ ttle milk with the cereals is necessary, at least a pint a day for every child. ground in When Milk or Milk Reardon, en route to Los Angeles in an automobile, Says: You Have ' Kees ‘ombination « or Choose You Don't Need Roast The Ladies’ Home Journal Theser Reet ulder of Mutton Pork Chops Round Steak | | | One quart Milk, costing. ....12c, equals 4-5 Ib. Ham, costing ........28¢ . .50c, equals 4 pounds Steak, costing. One quart Ice Cream, costing 35c, equals eighteen Eggs, costing. ...... . 75c One pound Cheese, costing. .30c, equals 3 lbs. Pork Chops, costing. .$1.05 The above comparisons are given on the basis of calories, or units of energy. ‘ ‘This ts indispensable to balance the ration and make it live with p: tive results, on Indian corn bread, made of the whele grain, and milk. “A POUND OF INDIAN ¢ . A DAY AND A PINT MILK W 2 A GOOD RATION FOR WORKINGMAN. Money spent for high priced prepared foods * * ts worse anyone to live exclusively on thes workingman CAN live sary. DERFL element required for the maintenance-of health and strength o many of us look upon milk merely as a beverage, when, as a matter of fact, it Ia a REAL FOOD. Che butter and ice cream, being the concentrated products of milk, con tain its wonderful food properties in relatively greater degree. Would you conserve food? Would you tm- prove health? Would you economize? Woukl you jon the world-wid triotic movement to avoid waste? ‘Then LEARN HOW MILK AND OTHER DAIRY FOODS, properly used in your Kitchen and on the dining taple, WILL CUT DOWN YOUR COST OF LIVING dairy foods and less of the expensive foods, Seat sconomioal dishes rade FoR ECONOMY $1.00 most efficacious. Most people can tfect comfort, and with fine nutri- than wasted Dr. Wiley explains that he does not expect foods, and but that a on this ration if neces- that the diet should be varied. THIS PROVES CONCLU OOD VALUE OF Mother Nature "RELY THE WON- MILK—the food has placed every into whic Get more nutriment at less cost, Use more ASK FOR FREE DAIRY FOOD COOK BOOK Ask > Pubtic ar milkman y Bureau . for a fre writ wcond fl the Dairy Products or Now Times Bldg. Kk of substantial and with dairy foods.