The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 28, 1917, Page 6

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Veton Telearaph News Service of the United Press Assoctation Ente Postoffice as Second-Clase Matte’ By mall, out o at Seattle, Wash 6 mow; @ mos $1.90 & month DF [eebiinved Waty by The Star P t exchanur biisbieg Co 0 aeetine all denart THROW THIS BOOK OUT OF OUR SEATTLE SCHOOLS! 667 PLEDGI And while they are performing it, a he Books lies on the shelves of the school book room, the title “Im Vaterland” on the binding, and for a front | & full-page picture of democracy’s arch enemy & i, © -o is to forget his fealty to the Fatherland ms well as those who are living in America With a world at war against the madness of Blood, “Im Vaterland” Germanize the world is part of the and Seattle’s school authorities, #0 remain on the list of high school textbooks up the matter. studen Look into it? Yes, by all means do. Kultur that manifests itself in the Belgian atrocitie: LOOK INTO IT, IF ALREADY YOU HAVE DONE SO—AND THEN ACT. SIGHT UNSEEN Seeing is believing, we say. presses a true test of reality. "we deny its existence Yet each of us live daily an unseen life. We build railroads and grow corn. And the phrase “Money, 4 ise We can see. Mere token of the greater reality lives and is the unseen | ‘ » “I have seen electricity.” oknows that Mr. Layman has seen nothing of the sort. is but a token of the presence of electricity. has been seen by no man. the thing none sees—the self of each of us, nas in the unseen. te The Star’s tobacco fund. ALL THOSE extra cops of Chief | have much sifect on the woman pivove: SUCCESS IS sweet; ‘thru manifold struggies and defeats —Alcott. TTLE STA NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWsrArens yoar $3.50 Private allegiance to my flag and the republic for} of blue text with When this blue-bound propaganda of the kaiser’s is dis tributed to teeve high school boys and girls, they will be 4 ht that the one thing every good German should never} They will learn that no Germans love their native heath he Kultur S Savagery, with the United States dedicated to the elimination lof the Hohenzollerns, the disgraceful spectacle is presented of @ur own city schools retaining a book that deifies Wilhelm] y, glorifies the crown prince, and smacks its lips} @pprova! of Bismarck’s “blood and iron” rule of the weak insidious campaign with knowledge of its nefarious, treacherous teachings, permit The school board met Wednesday night and failed to Superintendent of Schools Cooper on irsday, however, hastens to assure an American city that “intends to look into it before the book is given out to For, from cover to » it breathes the spirit of Berlin, the Kultur which per- ts the bombing and torpedoing of women and children, s N we fancy, Unless a thing can be seen We write books ar P doggedly pursue certain embossed bits of paper and me! books, corn and railroads—these, we say, are real Yet none of these, in truth, is other tha each of} The layman looks at an electric light, notes the glow and Yet even the near-scientist Life is seen by no man; only its evidences are visible. But is felt by all men. And no reality is realer than that feel! put each admission shows that the} jckingham’s don’t seem to | the sweeter If long delayed, and attained BY KENNETH W. PAYNE LONDON, Eng., Sept. 28.—And now it's the Tommiette! Bohind the }zone of fire at the British front In France, billets for 4,000 girl sot tlers have just been completed. And the girt soldiers are al ready on the job, actively helping their brother Tommies win the which it stands, one nation indivisible, with freedom wan @nd justice for all.” They are snap. Once a week in the Seattle high schools several thou ty. See Sand boys and girls rise and pay this tribute to their fla Women's Army It is the simple ritual of democracy Auxiliary corpe— the “W. A. A, ©." They have enlisted for one year, aoe [Of the duration of the war, CCC] Short of actual fighting there fare few kinds of work behind the to OT prior to leaving for the front In Realization of overthrow of the autocracy, if the war ts fighting # Into has until Stl of the The |kaiser to make bis Electricity | parent return of Belgian independ. ence. Step by step the kaiser ts begin ning to admit be has lost the war: | same old crafty diplomatic methods | By sight are we privileged to believe not so much in the|¢ominate the German government. | The katser’s Belgian offer, tf ac-| cepted, would represent a far WILL WE see you at the Dreamland dance tonight? Proceeds) "o"I0e victory for kalsertsm The katser Insists that there be [administrative separation of the eh and Walloon divisions of 4s is where kalserism plays its sinister purpose The kaiser might as well insist that those parts of America where the German language is spoken be Satisfaction That's what you want when buying a Suit. more than promise this. man who comes here. We is always a customer. Garment We Sate OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT you. Suits and for Fall and Winter are here in big and compl assortments — every n model and style feature, cluding all the Military fects can be had here in wool, well tailored, perf fitting Suits and Coats. the new colors and cloths $15 $25 $20 $30 Coats tones of the Many with belt effects, with large collars same material. new MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S HATS, SHOES, HOSIERY, ric. Materials Dress Well—Never Miss the Money. Pay You Get Paid. mette trimmed and Sealette, $29.75 up. UNION STORE—WE CLOSE AT 7 P. M. SATURDAYS, G 1113 THIRD AVENUE Between Seneca and Spring Sts. You need not pay all in 30 days. We ar fange terms to suit do We guarantee it to every 3 Our customers know that this statement is true—that’s why a customer at Gately’s The Gately Buying Power of 106 Stores Is Back of Every Sell. Overcoats ete ew in ef. all ‘ect All at Womep’s and Misses’ Are handsome in rich, warm season. and pocket of Others are trimmed with fur and fur fab. Broadcloth, UNDERWEAR AND FUR.| velour and burella. Prices NISHINGS. $22.7 $27.75. ».75. n esquim- fur administratively separated from | the districts where English 1s spoken. The official Belgian language, and the language of Belgian lter- ature is French. Walloon ts a French dia The Flemish| language, however, is s Dutch} E. D. K's... | | COLYUM | MAN TO PLEASE, WE'LL | WAGER eee | “T have had occasionally to raise | my ” says Lord Northcliffe, in Collier's, “and shout into receivers ise of the nose of great guns.” | Why not try talking thru the trans-| mitter? | eee | | Germany has sent her regrets to| Sweden over the Luxburg affair. Poor Sweden, There's nobody to| whom she can send regrets. HELEN MUST HAVE BEEN A WHIRL- WIND a high school a correspondence, eee However, Jack Bunny dent of Rabbit Hollow, county, Ind. is a rest Jennings eee Hoover says meat prices are go ing to be left to the law of supply | and demand. We hope so. Here-| totore the’ price has been accord. ing to the size of the victim's wad. one Too warm to stop the ice, eee On the other hand, we read in the New York papers that a milk dealer there says milk will eventu-| ally go to 15 cents a quart. And we're just gullible enough to be lieve it ee “That sign m up before the t have been put panish war,” com: ments D, G. “Why, today, a lady that 1s, a perfect lady—couldn't get hor feet under her skirt, even if] he sat down,” {(BULLBROS. Just Printers 10138 THIRD MAIN 1043 \¢ Analysis of the War Moves } By J. W. T. Mason -: STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 28, 1917. ‘HARK! HARK! GIRLS ARE MARCHING—4,000 OF ‘EM, -| Tommiettes, Aiding British Troops at Front, Prove They Can Excel in Any War Work Except Actual Fighting | ~~~ efficient Girls’ War Song The Tommiettes haven't yet | eloped thelr own songs, but the “Land Girls,” sinee lavt spring replacing men on the farms, have a whole book ful Tune, There a hoeing my lunch draws nigh ‘sa big, big space Inside For that plece of apple ple “The Long, Long Trail.” | long, long line of T's a long, long time since breakfast, But when my dreams come true Tl be tearing down yon path way To my pork and = rabbit stew!” | front these «irl soldiers will not soon have taken over Tommiettes of Britain's women's army auxiliary corps in their last drill in Hyde Park, London, France. ° PAGE 6 Drivers in the motor transport) 50 per cent |wervice, orderiies, military tele men, graph,and telephone workers, air Plane repairers, mechanics, poke, Just asked carpenters, shoomakers, tailors and me ra—the Mat of their oO) In this w cupation endlens seth as For every four Tommiettes, three thouvandanth Tommies are released to do actual fighting, the only war work in) In the elvilian occupa which n can still excel which they have rele It i# hardly 60 years since any the front, the eff war service was thought Impossl women has long blo for women. hore. Florence Nightingale opened up the hospital field inj Today almost the only men tn the big military hospitals are the wounded soldiers and the sur geons he Third London general hos- have t pital, caring for 2,000 soldiers, are public 600 women, ‘nurses, orderiies, walt restes, cooks and masseuses, They) In are quicker, gentler, more efficten The munitions works are prac Itically run by munitionettes, 25 to | Written for The United Press t, strongly allied to the Ger tongue. It Is spoken mont ex neively by the peasantry terature of ita own © kalser's purpose ts to cause Stomach Relief! and has | & Teutonic language to supercede the French language tn Belgium, from which it is but a step to the introduction of German “kultur” among the Belgians, | The Flemish-Walloon trick in the kalser’s offer shows how neces wary It fs to werutir w of the Kaiser's dip Noth ng « cepted as open and The Relgian proposal will not be accepted by the allies Stop Indigestion Gas, Sourness—Pape’s Diapepsin In five minutes! Neutralizes stomach acidity, reliev- ing dyspepsia, heartburn, distress. Time it! will sweeten a sour, gassy or outofor der stomach within five minutes If your meals don't fit comfort ably, or what you eat Hes like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that is usual, ly @ sign of acidity of the stom- ach. Get from your pharmacist a fifty cont case of Pape’s Diapepsin and take @ dose Just as soon as you can There will be no sour rising», no belching of undigested food mi! with acid, no stomach gas or heart burn, fullness or heavy feeling tn the stomach, nausea, debilitating headaches or dizziness. This will Pape's Diapepsin Read! and, besides, there will be food left over tn the stom ach to poison your breath with naw odors, os Diapepsin helps to neu the excessive acid in the stomach, which {s causing the food fermentation and preventing proper digestion. Relief in five minutes tn waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cane tain enough “Pape’s Diapepel usually keep the entire family fre. from stomach acidity and ite symp. toms of indigestion, dyspepsia. sourness, gases, heartburn, and headache, for many months. It be longs tn your home. | no Kou con * to Special Reductions on Plates, Crowns and No Charge FOR PAINLESS ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS Southeast Corner First and Pike J, R. VAN AUKEN, Mgr. Bridgework. EXTRACTIONS WHEN HE LEFT Thousands are on the farms, hoe. harvesting, London the girl bus conduc yet, with th more for aby while all eo than}summer to emile patronizingly at jthe uniformed girls patiently drill-|on the Tho ministry of munitions has | ing. for more women bad | make airplanes k of extreme delicacy, suring to of an ine hands and eyes are more pr In Hyde Park. What are they good for? And suddenly London been awakened to the fact that they are actually an officially tary force, the Women's Army Auxiliary corps, ing has been in grim earnest, and now they have marched off to France as soldiers, to take up the work only eniisted Tommies did before. dairying. ut $2 a day their numbers are continually tn ry, creasing war work cannot be overest! 10,000 women! ‘The women soldiers at the bases in France and on tne lines of com miliar person-| munication, are paid from ages now in Hyde Park and Letces | ter square. And ‘amar lodging London was | 10 Steps from Yesler the poir has members of recognized mili ow d Their drill- | fend | put it tries Suitably accommodated in camps tors, working ten hours a day six and barracks behind the front, and| days a week, with a war bonus of $1 come such models of servants that nobody wants them to quit the postoffice have taken the plac strict military discipline, | and the importance LONDON $100 to tant year, with free board and tenced at M Seattle’s Largest Union Store “We Cater to the Man Who Works” We prove to you that there’s a decided advantage in trading at Schermer’s. A Big, New Stock—Latest Styles in Union Made Mackinaws that great utility garment for Fall and economy ¢com- Shipment just in includes cele- brated Oregon City, Chippewa Falls and “Black Bear” Wint bined r—warmth and "the famous right here in Seattle. and plain effects in folk and other styles. ueual assortment at the Blue-Jackets Our boys in the Navy enjoy their Bevo. The Navy De- partment ple its er seal of endorsement on this triumph in soft drinks, by allowing it to be sold and red on all Naval Veseels. ane Ashore or afloat, you will find Bevo a palate-pleasing, refreshing and nutritious beverage. Just the thing to take alon, or camp and for the ice-box at hore, Editor's Mail DEVILS Paltor The Star killing or murdering of the |child by the motorcyclists was to t There are so many motor who do not care for ii man or the devil, much an opportunity prenents and I am an eyewitness to such @ similar case, and the speed to «et mildly, | ike a mad dog jand if one of those devils gets on jot my children and don't get away, jhe will wish he had, 2lst Ave. and Hanford. ot} Adele Pankhurst Is Serving Time Again hurst, daughter of the English mfli- ler, has been sen- ourne, Australia, to & month's imprisonment. If the name “Tommiette” sticks started @ disturbance near the par it will be not as a joke, but as an|Hament bullding, insisting apon ne there has been a tendency the past honored title. *: uffrage conscription, very SCHERMER’S SPECIAL LEADER, AT —$7.50— Guaranteed pure Wool—a dandy Mackinaw for the price: WS See the Show Windows Exceptional $15 Over The utmost values at the popular $15 price; alee $18, $20, $22.50 and $25, CARL SCHERMER |’ 103-105 First Avenue South Your editorial way—well, to would go down I have @ family, J. W. HUNT, 28. —Adele Pank- line—made ; Plaids, stri i newest Nor : S SSSA x mG, ( ih i SZ We ‘SeiTiar (on Beans This Fax Dealers 5 * Say Bevo—the all-year-'round soft drink Bevo is sold in bottles only, and is bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST. LOUIS Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc. g for sail or cruise—auto trip | SEATTLE, WASH,

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