The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 27, 1917, Page 6

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ITH the National Guard mobilized and the select service army drawn, it is but natural that all over the country there is keen interest In what the government will do with them, Will they be rushed hurriedly to the battle- fields of France and Belgium, or will they undergo a sufficient training and seasoning here at home in order to make them fit for fighting? Fortunately, we have a line on what the war department thinks about it. In his correspondence with Col. Roosevelt last |. spring, Secretary Baker said that if an expedition- force were sent to Europe he would feel obliged ' to urge that “it be officered by and composed of men selected because of their previous training and, as far as possible, actual military experience.” THE SEATTLE STAR| saeT ih Ave. Near Unt OF SCRIPTS NORTHWE! Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postottic Iy mail, out of city, 35, > per month up to 6 moa, € mom $1.90; year $3.60 By carrier, city, 300 & month. ID YOU FEEL IT? " Down the street, the other day, behind a band and city jes, and so on, came some hundreds of our new sol- "boys. They are uniformed, their guns are at shoulder, seir side arms rattle, their kits are on their backs They are to win victories. | You feel the glory of a righteous war. You cheer. ant to wave flags. You boil with enthusiasm Tt is great to be an American. It is great to have such for the cause. Aren't they brave-looking, warrior-looking! to win! ‘Following these ranks of uniformed, equipped, almost men come other ranks of our new soldier boys, | : |, unarmed, in a variety of hats, suits and shoes,| St as they came from home. “You can almost see where mother brushed a coat, or| sister tied™a necktie, or wife clung about a neck You don’t want to cheer or wave flags. Your enthus- gives way to seriousness. You don’t think of victories, ae, the national strength, the justicé of the cause You notice that the motherly looking woman beside you multitude of spectators is crying behind her hands. "You realize that the bloody roadway of war leads right | to the chair at the family table afd the place in the fire- How Heroes all, whether in khaki or cheviot, heroes leaving and so many of them to die or live mutilated, while miss them, miss them awiully Is it in the clothes? What's the psychology of it? > THE LIBRARY FUND le is asked to raise $25,000 as its share in the million campaign to establish libraries for the soldiers F ‘This city, which has so generously responded to the Lib- bond and Red Cross funds, must not now fail. campaign is intended to give the American fighting | detained in camp, a measureo f the privileges of ordinary | life. M necessity to American young men In countries where illiteracy predominates, campaign would possibly be doomed to failure | the United Sgates, we are incapable of such failure Seattle, the city thati s so proud of its high honors in 1 matters, the $25,000 asked must be forthcoming. a million dollars to be raised really means that there} ‘be less than a dollar spent for each soldier and sailor in service. | costing approximately $10. | THIS IS “LIBRARY W MUST DO THEIR F RIGHT AFTER the fall of Ri that Ruselan premier has got a | | enaky married an actress. YORK CITY hase got more flour than it can store. Maybe now have a 40-cunce loaf for 6 cents. Also, maybe they won't. DAM Any short and stout as she used to. GERMAN CHANCELLOR “hopes war will be terminated this It will If the kaiser is! | | bu, Mere Is One Way to A It's a great life If you are under age you have to} ko | blows. If you are more than 21 or under a And if yon |apend your time wishing you were) abl CALL FARLY AND AVOID A fort vat hea They are to add new glories | tints ‘the nation. They are to have a place in fame and history. ness @ You | Reascnatte! theement tn Indiana : According jtanks are to be can |country for kne wh v has to consult a physician so fre quently * Why dia C: an 8 E | reign v ar fi STAR—THURSDAY, SEPT. 27, 1917. chea this conclusion,” continued Secre- son that any such expedition will be made up of young Americans who will be sent to expose their lives \n the bloodiest war yet fought in the world, and under conditions of warfare involving applications of science to the art of such a character that the very highest degree of skill and training and largest experience are needed for their guidance and protection, “1 could net reconcile my mind to a recommendation which deprived our soldiers of the most experienced leadership avall able, in deference to any mere sentimental consideration, nor could | consent to any expedition being sent until ite members have been seasoned by most thoro training for the hardships which they would have to endure.” As the war department has wisely decided that no troops will be sent abroad unless thoroly seasoned; as experts agree that two years’ season- ing is none too long; and as we won't have the shipping to transport a million American troops and the necessary food, equipment, munitions and supplies much, if any, inside of two years, can't “My Judgment tary Baker, “for the COLYUM nowadays. hi when the curfew whistle you get drafted | you're older than $1 rs you either pay income tax or CHAPTER | “You're the Black Sheep of the sald Lord Shropshire, jangrily. “You're always wool gathering And when you ought led te ten ee =|to be gambling or getting soused . 5 minutes north; large. je to, | Family,” € ot res polis (Ind) News. 7. army officer, eveloped in this use in France. We >w four or five tanks in Seattle 0 are already developed. eee to Anewered by Mr. E. D. K. Why ia it that a cistern digser -H. M. D. Because he fs not a well digger. | ! Nick have to carry | umbrella when he abdicated >~ | 8. T } Hecause he went out in a hard What is the hardest thing for a r to raino?—A. } R Ypinions no doubt would differ. | rs inald would not accept But Mr. E. D. K. never heard of a| the medal the colone! offered farmer raisin ples j ° ke a gentleman, what do you do What the liveliest p t the | You dissipate y in mad ” b> © lor of differential calculus and | Atlantic ocean? Li aw i jout the ald of delicate scientific | WHY NoT 100K FoR A WIrrt | rasor. the library | houses Mins F Right behind a toving stea at part of the ocean is alwa: ake. ceadilly chanting problema {hn abstruse mathe Bah!” t bah me, fath retorted Regina 8 It possible to see sounds with- | Stop Indigestion instruments ?—N. 8. L. | Yes, indeed. One hag no difft jeulty in seeing earrings. Wi h Bi ° OK it 1-nesia Mast : Wanted, at ence, a lady barbe . : Books and magazines are in this day and age ape attectisonte and cheerful, and capavie| Avoid Deadening Drugs PAGE 6 ee eep America Safe for Democracy! we be doing something in the meantime to make that democratic army not only valuable to the country but popular as well? Can't we make army service both profitable and educational for the soldiers, for the boys who have volunteered or been selected to serve our country? We offer these suggestions: Pay every private soldier in the army, whether in peace or war, THREE DOLLARS A DAY for his service to his country. Make the army a great national, democratic college, where our young men may prepare for the trade or profession r Be may elect to follow after their term of service is over. While training and seasoning our soldiers DANDRUFF MAKES HAIR FALL OUT 25 cent bottle of “Danderine” keeps hair thick, strong, beautiful. this! Girls! Try beauty of your hair in a few moments. don't like to be bahed. If I'm 4 black sheep I'll do all the bahing myself. Bah by!" and he swung out of the room. CHAPTER I Reginald Shropshire lay in a front line trench in Flanders hum- ming & low lullaby to himeelf in equations, He had just got to “If! X—y-aam (2) eqdals the cube root | of bVd 4"-—when he saw some black figures crawling across No Man d. “Biack Sheep,” he said to himaelf at first, for they looked like that. But he had second thought will bah them,” he said ‘to himaelf, “and {f they bah back {I'll know they are sheep.” 80 he | lifted up his head and cried “Bah!” “Bah,” answered the leader of} the sheep, but the bah had a Ger-| man accent, and Reginald gave the | alarm and thus saved the trenches from capture, for the sheep were Germans | CHAPTER Iii. Reginald would not accept the modal the Colonel offered him. No,” he said, “I am a@ black sheep, and do not deserve a | “But this,” said the Colon, ‘se a mere le made in Woolwich.” ‘et \"I ane,” agreed Reginald, | pt va Colonel the| les Boches!” cried CHAPTER IV. My precious lamb!" bleated Reginald’s mother, as she threw arma about the returned sol-| k to your muttona!” roared | his father, proudly, “My boy, I'm glad to see you. It was Woolworth) Within ten minutes after an ap- | While to know you fought so well.”| plication of Danderine you cannot | “Father,” said Reginald, “your|find a single trace of dandruff or | puns are getting worse and worse. | falling hair and your scalp will not You have sheered close to the tn-|{tch, but what will please you most tolerable in wit. And I can’t think|will be after a few weeks’ of any more good ones, either. Be|when you see new hair, fine and ides, this hasn't anything to do|downy at first—yes—bdut really of she whiskers with @ dail ponge: " with Mother Goose anyh 4 “che Be a> : i] othe Joo! yhow, 80 I|new hair—growin, all over the Aloe good cook snd evoeea!| and Artificial Digestants oe oooce we call this the end of the |cealp ‘ Springs (Ark.) Headlight. = Mack Shoe} je!” a Py ws in the stomach after eating, Uinck Sheen tal | A Ittle Danderine tmmediately ould be a relief,” agreed his Mr. E. D. K.'s Household Hints > | father. jdoubles the beauty of your hair A Connecticut locksmith has tn ‘ A bah relief,” commented Reg | N° difference how dull, f vented a detachable doorknob. It «| tnald tle and = scraggy, just moisten a Pr r can must each give the dollar or more that we can afford | rains and thus escape the exposure |that spoils the ordinary knob. a False teeth should be washed tn | £ } act cracked the courage of a Napoleon.) iammer unnecessary A fried egg will sour more quick ly Leno ae ae ientacill | About an hear after IE FASHION decrees that women shall be “tall and slender,” | Miss Ethel old Dame Nature merrily treads her way making just as mn, bore arrived idently did not have « fail another charge account on WANTS CLEAN POSTOFFICE Editor The Star bred Seattleite and I doubt wheth er more boosting and advertising for Seattle than 1 months, I have been in many cities ot sm: ulation, not so !mposing as ours, but were models of cleanliness, Ours, for some reason, 1s permit- ted to stable, | FAitor mothers have ow loved ones are to be separated from na, thi use of tobacco for giving strength and courage to fight. Cigaret amok ing dwarfs the body, we brain, and many times causes insan- ity. Rditer The Star test against this tobacco fund that you are advocating so #trengly. would suggest it better to advocate afi mo left a Gr ed 90 inj: I Th the boys. soline | moths out of them. ‘a . Never-throw away an old bane | In each Antonment there is to be erected a library build-| ment f i lin {t and a roof put on {t and it AND SEATTLE CITI-|can de jhouse and been taken away to the front, cal be taken ¢ a door when it occasionally to keep A wooden floor can be laid raised to the of the top attic lickory aked In acetic id for several days can be eaatly by the teeth, making a pain tn ple plan ever ha and T f ry a sir at once an led one. reot that y 4 « stomach. than a hard be cee THE TIGHTWAD nines and ved and ing to “come across,’ on Bay (Wis.) Democrat, Editor's Mail | T am a thoro any other individual has done In the last eight United States and Canada, the alleat of these being 12,000 pop- Their postoffices were look ike & second rate} MRS. HENRY SMITH, Gen, Del # lamps, and was heated by box stoves which burned cord wood THE CIGARET CURSE The Star Fathers and fought the cigaret rae for years, and now that our 5 perhaps forever, you seem to nk it your duty to advocate the forms were open kena the Let those y It themselves MRS. FLORENCE CROFY. that want tobacco iron wheels. AGAINST TOBACCO I, too, would pros i man and to support the boys’ widowed others and dependents, who are | t behind in Seattle. To preserve soldier's health and welfare in eat Britain, a Tommy {# not allow. to amoke a clgaret until 6 p, m.,| why should a Sammy's health be am a widow and my son has ave nothing but good will to’ MRS, J. B. RYA t and Santa Barbara. was constructed entirely f wood, lighted by oil It rested on blocks of India rubber instead of springs, plat- wheel trucks were used with Today 7,400 Pullman cars, built in the shops of the Pull- n Company, are operated by its own trained employes, Twenty-seven million’ pas- sengers are afforded assurance jcloth with Danderine draw it thru your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The ef. jfect {s amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and bave an abundance; an in nd carefully Finis. Pantages to Build Six New Theatres appearance of Alexander Pantages will t comparable luster, softness and theatres costing $ eact luxurtance. six ¢ {ties ent bottle of Knowl A ng to ann from an drué " sday night rove " {it in Sacran soft Fresno, Hakersfield, n genuine | beautiful hatr ar Goldsmitiy, will Just try a little Danderine A silent address is th eloquence of sincerity of safety, comfort and con venience on | 37 railroads, em- bracing 223,489 miles of track. Staunchly constructed, elec- trically lighted, sanitary, ven- tilated and steam heated, they include every feature for the personal convenience lux- ury of the passenger. In addition, the cars of the Pullman Company afford a uniform and continuous ser vice unequalled by that of any like organization in the world, PULLMAN COMPANY Chicago and four Doubles use, | REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS here in America, make every cantonment an Amer- ican college. Temper strenuous military training and seasoning with wholesome amusement an schooling to fit the boys for valuable citizenship in time of peace. The preparation for a trade or profession, to- gether with THREE DOLLARS A DAY pay, will enable every American soldier boy in the army to look forward to the end of service with hope and assurance. He will feel that when he has per- formed his patriotic duty for Uncle Sam, his coun- try will have enabled him to save money enough to get married, while fitting him to make good at a trade or profession and support a family. This will help KEEP AMERICA SAFE FOR DEMOCRACY. | | FREE PAINLESS DENTISTRY Teeth Extracted With the Aid of the World’s Greatest Discovery in Anaesthetics Without Costing You a Penny No matter how many, have the useless, health-destroying, torture-producing members removed by a skilled specialist absolutely with- out causing you the slightest hurt or pain. For sixteen months we have demonstrated the Boston’s wonderful system of Painless Den- tistry, treating thousands of patients without a single failure. You are welcome to test it free of all cost. No matter how difficult your particular case may be, we guarantee not to hurt you—even a little bit. You do not have to order other work. The Boston Dental staff of experts do but one class of work—the best. Only one grade of materials used—the best. Only the purest 22-karat gold used—nothing else in the 15 years this office has been estab- lished. In spite of the high quality, our charges are usually about half, or less, than the exclusive one-chair dentist in extravagant offices exacts from his few patients. BOSTON DENTAL C0. M. O. Sipes, D. D. S., Manager 1420 Second Avenue (Opposite Bon Marche) order to introduce our new (¥ jebone) p e, whie! Jang strongest plate known, covera vers iittio. oF the ar ee he eneeE you can bite n off the ce! Ruaranteed fifteen years. Gold Crown $15 Set of Teeth (w $10 Set of Teeth onal Be Bridgework, per tooth, gold..... White Crowns — Gold Fillings Sliver Filling: Platina Fillings — All work guaranteed for fifteen years. Have impression and get teeth same day Examination and advice f nd See Samples of Our Pinte and Bridge Work. We Stand the ost of our prese nended by o ¢ 8, Whose work is stil ion, Ask ¢ 2 towers who have tested our work, Wh our office, you are in the right place. Bring this ad with you OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS 207 UNIVERSITY STREET Opposite Fraser-Paterson Co. BB LOD lebone) $3 * taken tn the ree

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