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‘AIRPLANES TO CUT OUT THE LUNCH AND SAVE $50,000,000 WORTH OF FOOD IN AN HOUR! Fifty million dollars saved in the 60 minutes between 12 and 1 o'clock dally-$833,000 a minute for victory in the war Thia is the unique, practical plan suggested today for all Americans by Hazen J, Titus, food genius, the man who put the Northern Pacific railway on the world map as the “Route of the Great Big Baked Potato.” AFTER THE WAR BY L. HARPER LEECH "WASHINGTON, Oct, 9. “Every dollar invested in war alreraft is a dollar invested in air transportation after the war. “The United States is on the eve of a transportation revolu- tion which will follow the war, and the alreraft board probably | ny will play as important a part as It was in answer to President shipping board. The air | Wilson's direct appeal for food con is far as possible, are be. | servation thruout the nation th Ing made to facilitate transfor. jhe evolved bis lunch elimination mation Into Industrial equip: | idea on the way back home from ment when peace com ja ference with d Commins Thia is the statement of Senator | sione Morris Sheppard, author of the ad ministration alreraft board bill which has passed the senate and is pending in the house Herbert C. Hoover and high gxovernment officials in Washing ton An an originator of keen Titus is a wizard in a class by him Long before the war Sheppard| self. He is a dynamic, pulsating had proposed a department of aero-| thought factory running a 24-hour nautics, The substitution of the! shift plan for an alreraft board was the result of the ide. tween the navy and the aero socletios “This lunch elimination plan,” sald Titus, “will win big if every American heede the sug Gestion. It will prove a success pooling of army Pian Industrial Fleet | If 10 per cent of the population The young officers who have | follows out the idea developed the army's air pro. “In the first place, it will gram have from the very first | effect a vast seving in food modeled their plans with the | That is the most vital problem view to an immense industrial before the world today. The air fleet after the war. Pian Mail Rout | Undoubtedly the service will be last crust of bread may tip the ® for victory. It will save money which le needed to push the war to a satisfactory con- Although both Fairbanks’ feature and our Sennett firat commercial dollars to make automob/ Thanks to the war, the necessity of investing hun dreds of miiliona of government money in aircraft, the industry has passed thru experimental stages which would have cc ‘AUTO STRIKES MAW FIRST AT PIKE Continuous 11 to 11 king 4 for the truck into R. } cupled years if left to private rietor of Admission 15c capital on at, with ; Stewart st Children 10c The doors of the Unive: th Mo A. have nen at the n n thrown op } al training static eg and arm Today’s Market Report worth up to $7.00, go at $3.48. Men’s stores in the Northwest th ind lenses from start 1d we are the only one in SEATTLE, ON FIRST AVENUE e, by gradu : t_ prescribed ary. lv BINYON OPTICAL CO. 10 FIRST AVENU! Near Seneen St. H. M. ROGERS The People’s Friend, Who Starties Seattie With Rock-Bottom Sale Prices Union Store—Union Hours. Work |! Heavy Shoes cut to $1.45. If you are in need of Shoes, come to this sale. Wednesday | starts the final clearance. Not only Shoes, but Men's Suite, 4 Overcoats, Raincoats, Furnishings, etc.—all must go :: Men's Sample Suits $6.8 sel Sample Suits that sold to $18.00 go Wednesday at a $6.85. Men’s $20.00 high-class Suits—a rare value at + this price—$8.95. *| Men’s Suits, beautifully tailored, in tweeds, worst- zeleds and serges; latest styles; many Society and Strauss i pure wool fabrics in lot; former prices to $30.00. Cut a |Wednesday to $11. 85. Cocoanat Meal Alfalfa Meat | Oyster Shetls Clam shetle sae8 23.00 16.90 THE BEST BRIDGEWORK It le possible to find any- ¢ in Seattle is the fin- Brotlers—1917 Ducks Fat Under 4 ibe 4 Ibe. and over eone—4004 size, Tarkeye—L reseed | peaks ine eaitee work. Sees Weck hope as 33| Men’s Raincoats and Overcoats go at same prices. manship employed In our | Veal—Fancy, 65 to 125-pound 15@ .16% | Wednesday we will sell Men's 50¢ PRESIDENT SUS- own laboratory. 19¢.: 10c Handkerchiefs at Be; $1.50 Cluett @ PENDERS at » brick «49 derwear, O8e. 5 Thes ai great stocks. {Portland stock and will throw it all on sale tomorrow. It’s a| } a huge undertaking—and in these days of soaring prices it will be as a godsend to the economical shoppers of Seattle. Bridgework at $5 and Up Domestic wheel Limburger . Oregon triplets Young America . - lock fw . cod Per tooth will stand the eager’ Brick 33/ 20c Arrow Collars, late styles, will be sold 2 for 15c, acid test of competition, Washington triplets « a5 A large lot of Men’s Overalls, all sizes, go at 494. Young America . 6o@ 327 and give the wearer that tisfaction which t quality of Men's Pants that sold to $3, at DS¢. Boys’ Suits, worth to $6, jat $2.85. Dress Shi Black Bear Overalls, Work Gloves, Mackinaws, Logger Shoes, Slicker Coats, etc., in fact every- EXPERT TO HANDLE modern bridgework can bring. | thing for a man’s dress or work wear included in this sale, Bai gla ty REPAIRS OF FERRY ii cing at the lowest price ever placed on world’s stand. xaminatio! § mates free. The rebuilding of the once ard merchandise. Note carefully our Address— F abandoned ferry Washington will Look for the Big Union Store with the Red Front. RED FRONT CLOTHING COMPANY 1508-1510 FIRST AVE. Rav. Cor. Fourth and Pike be supervised by an engineering Phone Main 3256 . 7 expert, according to a decision eached late Monday afternoon by the King,county commissioners Representatives of various | paying interests will advise in the} construction. | Ww: | The commissioners will inspect] [tue Washington Wednesday. ednesday. So come—now is your chance to ge® first pick Sale Starts Wednesday Morning at 8 A. M. Sharp. STAR—TUESDAY, OCT. 9, 1917. CUT OUT THE LUNCH GARRY THE MAIL Tits» Sprines Idea for War Economy ae | ideas | Shoes, $1.35; Girls’ School) | are just a few items picked at random from these| Rogers just grabbed this great Larsen-Mueller | }a superior officer when off duty PAGE 3 \} Hazen J. Titus, food genius, who proposes national tunch measure. SA} AUUUUNNNNAOUUUNNONLOOODAUUNONAAANOOULE Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS z (UNL ENUEGLLLULLU LO How Clean Gilt Picture Frames something, Why don’t our women start a gun crusate? If it is gen erally understood that women will protect themselves, and | the first drel get what is coming to him, I nk it will rid this city of women slugger If a woman has a gun, yo she does not stop to count fore shooting fally when honor im at st Every woman who must be out after dark alone ought to carry a This in term, and er ne > nigh more school alone with the children thre nts a week But 1 hear ny doors, | will answering it, a 0 is there be ™ yaelf befe arm 4 make eur mi re it pos sible, wh ret n the foor quickly selves Wom 1 must be and 2 tr protect them: an Ree no other way A WOMAN RESIDENT. Thinks Women's done Also, tell me ff an ever c lackberry does er wild as long as it is an Itivated fruit? RW aquaré foot ore th feet square however, are different An evergreen blac’ is wild until cultivated Quakers or Friends Forbid War Service Dear Kindly answer what religious sect forbids its mem participate in war hanking you kindly for a reply, .m, DOUNTFUL, The Friends, or Quakers, for bid their members to. partict r in war © same and two square rry vine Miss Grey Nationality of St. Patrick Is In Douht Miss Grey: Would you kind t ae ly poe ten me as to the nationality For beauty and perma- || “*\patter, Ngee and’ Chee ‘ | Shirts at @D¢; Men’s Wool Underwear, worth to $2.00, goes| of st. Patrick thru your columns? nence, for sanitation and ————@/at 68e¢; Men's Flannel Shirts, worth to $3.50, at $1.28 E. B ey our rr, cove, as| Men's $1.50 Union Suits at 68¢; $2.50 Silk and Wool Un-| No one really knows, Some man, others that he was an Ital fan Soldier Required to Salute at All Times Dear Cynthia; I have been argu ing the point as to whether a pri vate American soldier should salute ry do in the British army—that is, 4 commissioned officer. BERT. A private, when meeting perior officer, salutes, regard less of whether he ts on duty SAMMIES SAVING Staff Correspondent CAMP LEWI 9.—Not only foo¢ conservation of a soldier uses they Tacoma, Oct yneervation, but verything else that the slogan at the welection of the man to do the} on Pike Street—Opposite the Public Market, |cantonment. “A general order has work: Thirty thousand dollars or] Just North of Pike & Pr deem issued to the ainit command more will be fuvested in the re We've just bought another new stock, and it goes on salej@rs directing them to suggest [their men that tinfoil, which worth from 10 to 20 cents a Pere be saved. “ts, STOP DANDRUFF .. ht Hair becomes charming, wavy, at any of Every can double its beauty. Your hair| order in the camp, have been given becomes light, wavy, Muffy, abund:! gang. | jant and appears as soft, lustrous eee and charming as a young girl's Take it back!” sald a man from Dress atter appiyin | Fri Fait, Whelenie esars tr After appl re Danderine. |Callfornia to a post exchange sales a ona . . . j iso try thie—© ena clo’ man today “You can't shove any nad aly: ala 4 Should Be Modified — \i"\itie Danderine and. caretully honey clair eth wae a Dear Mine ( nt the nu-/draw It through your hair, taking!” It took considerable argument to E. N. Furman Mr. H. M. Rogers, Who Secured the Great Emporium ee ae dae ce the Native Son that 10) buifds business personali I) cleanse the hair of dust, dirt a Canadian ¢cime : 7 and Larsen-Mueller Shoe Stock of Portland, Oregon, eS eheuune ai Gad te daet eo lawful money"? “me '8\ his students from the Cuts Prices Still Lower for Wednesday. Thousands » most | moment 1 sbled the os That's why they are im of Men’s and Ladies’ Shoes All Thrown on Sale| ‘*!!”™ ace ; yaks tissee’ Winkie aan A iaiat tnentry, ‘he ag id Civil and Go Tomorrow at the Following Sale Prices: neglected or is seragey, other day, with the old “gag” of is-| °F a Bookkeepiajh 3 ees taped es > nutable to the state of faded, dry, brittle or thin. Besides | suing ple checks s te Sy Walk-Over and) seminudity so often met with on beautifying the hair, Danderine dis-| “Got your ple check yet?” was Advanced Grammar ample Shoes, broken lines, ovr streets’ Not that the victims Selves every particle of dandruff; passed along the line after retreat % , eee be gilt ROP eng he ong purifies and {nvigorates|pne night, and for the next hall. Northwestern orth to $4.00, go at $1.98. 7 ooo ee forever stopping itching hour, until everybody foun! out it Shorthand ‘Nebraska, per eet 's Fine Sample Shoes. entive to co ng hair, but what will was a hoax, the sergeant major of : lec iP’ lis arousba te the 2 you most’ will be after a the regiment was besieged with de Rhabar— Par th worth to $5, go at $2.48. gogenersten, or near when you see new mands for the mythical pastry | peuiee—tocal, per uate Ladies’ and Misses’ Shoes, | ‘"" *!*"',°" lovely » Mi gdh ete | ef Potatere—Locaia, new | ine-her ebarins to the pat ai but wowing ‘ail ee aa i Reest Potton worth to $3.50, go at $1.48.) 1 whould like to hear what some of over the It you care for 80 MILLION LOAKED ¢ BULL BR ’ 4 Miackherries orrs EY your readers have ay in thi pretty, soft jots of it Os. (Cranberviec —8¢-ib. bax Ladies’ Walk-Over Shoes, aurd; also Waal temeey tite 1 surely a2 ot Knowl WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—Loans : {enoee—cree broken lines, $1.89. propose GALNOY, |ton's Danderin n any drug of $40,000,000 each to Great | Just Printers i ane’. con Ladies’ and Misses’ Sam- é : ae or toilet counter, and just try ae and France were announced | 1013 THIRD MAIN 1 willl trae fe Urameee Ail vines ple White Canvrs Shoes One Foot Square and Free Examination |" and Pumps, at 98c. One Square Foot Same Prunes ectndes cies ss $7.00 Red Cross Ladies’) pear Miss Grey: To settle an ar Best $2.50 cuasses|"*™-"—**" Shoes, 12-in. top, at $2.48, |fument wil You tease stato i On Earth Cyentey May 04 Grate 7 Men’s Finest Dress Shoes, square and one * foot We are one of the few optical i . ca y in sh | | i: ACTUALLY WON'T SHRINK WOOLENS | Satisfactory Terms Always “ane QROTE-RANKINCO| | ; SOCIALIST MAY Ir WIN ELECTION | FOR N Y MAYOR | OTTO F. NEGEL. President | ols ies | BY FREDERICK M. KERBY | NEW YORK Oct 9 A Tam many or socialist mayor for New | York which? i That seems to be the outlook for th election Nov, 6, as the result faprimary in which fraud and | tricker played a big part, and which has resulted in a four-cor. « ] nered race aha The"Stay Satisfactory’ Range Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, he .- fusion candidate elected in'1914|4| Is Made Proof Against Damage From Rust by | with a nonpartisan administration, Vitreous Enameled Flue Linings i Ifaces the probability of defeat be } cause of the nomination inst r | |him of William M. Bennett, a re yee i ] |pubiican, Sixty to 70 per cont of which means you } Mitchel’s support in 1914 came can enjoy the from republican sources, He op | posed Tammany then and won economy and sat- jj | ‘The Tammany nominee is Judge taechak | !Jobn F. Hylan of Brooklyn, W isfaction of an air- } Ham Randolph Hearst is supporting | Hylan, and with the republicans split between Mitchel and Bennett, malleable the quick tight range e mma ol izatlo pte fb A oy te “eet ia over service of a steel War ta lesue - But another fector enters. This range, and at the year, for the first time, the social age same ists have a chance to put a mayor tiara into office Mitchel has staked his whole durabil- campaign on a demand that the a, people endorse his straight-out ity greater than Americanism, and his loyal sup-| any type of port of the administration in the range ever comedy, “A Bedroom Blun. in connection with| hea = der,” are showing all week the postoffice, A fast mat!) “hut the plan will do more than| Dear Miss Grey: Will you please’ And Morris Hillquit, socialist known _ before. —we warn you against Ecatee onan b My rte Mt that. If every American takes up tall me how I enn lean my get candidate, has accepted th Mitchel} sEvery house- ng this ae up the ng Operations tne idea, a miracle in the phys cture frames ont dimming challenge, and the whole soctalis last-minute otc See rye ayetem t# al-/ical and mental efficiency of the | ‘em fear, 0c UREWIFE. "cam aign turns on opposition to kee Pp er Pas t ng planne on Moe 8a 2 gibt ; ve a clean, soft white cloth. conscription, and on demands fo ook A treasury department const pa-| alo" Will be worked within a) 111 1 tn white of omg and then | peace | pie s trol in connection with the reve “I seldom eat lunch. I find Lean{ ®POnKe the frame; rub with a The New York World has con-| wants it done ] he ct ip £ servic ? werk: without tt dry cloth. eded Hillquit a vote of a least | economically dy being mapped out | “Now that I have suggested this Seniony 1126,000, and 226,000 would sweep | VGaco eo @ 7 . . r , | - . . nd wi Pipi hy Ae c- of the war thousands | pian to the nation, t have, of course, | She Urges Women to |the socialists into power in every |} _/ \ 4 d well shoul tp pdt nay will return from) quit the meal entirely . c 4 branch of the city administration, |} ‘o it on a Mon- the battle fronts, ready to enter the!” “Not only that, but the Northern | Start Gun Crusade A. large .eaetion of New York arch Malleable Range Pacific ts ready to eliminate the poy ation 01 oreign parentage is) . be . ad — Dei r ose re | ALL WEEK—NO LONGE Many enolncere predion tne |e an ts tiring rat nares sina| gee Bite Grer: These sepent-| cialis Trade your old stove as part payment on & commercial development of the | lons of covert hundred thousand | yay toro! 4 “ Monarch. airplane will eur is that of the the change.” soroly aroused me to writ le “GIRLS! BEAUTIFY. YOUR HAIR AND ionuy Pouce canny = RIFLES AT LEWIS |. tate Corres: c AMP L 9.—"Get but I'll bet 1 to get out,” re enlisted man who ar marked one lustrous and thick in rived yesterday when the officer few moments took his name at the receiving enh shed bit of dandruff dis- ity i a j A , ‘ Only the camp police have rifles appears and hair stops now. ‘Large shipments of guns, 6a] | coming out well as heavy and light field artil — ery and machine guns, are on their For 25 cents you can save your) way, jt is said, but as yet only 298 hair, In less than ten minutes You) men, whose duty it is to maintain ¥ Wash blankets the Lux way, and foal how soft, white and 1 fluffy they are CLEANSES BLANKETS WONDERFULLY WITHOUT RUBBING dirt perfectly, without rubbing. Don’t Say It Can't Be Done No matter what soa) The hardest test of any soap product is in washing woolens. Th y must never be rubbed or The Lux Way to you use twisted. 3 _ urself what a S st never be rubbed now—see for yo bas dinate Rn nen: remarkable difference Lux oF very hot water, nee makes. Don’t say woolens can’t Nothing so quickly mats and be washed in hot water—try until the rater haa cooled shrinks blankets and woolen washing them the Lux way. ineh re garments, Until you do, you will never be- Why Lux Won’t Shrink lieve it possible to get such Peed ate, cade, three Woolens wonderful, fleecy, soft woolens. isis‘ tndiices Ga Lux flakes dissolve instantly Lux will ms Ne cand the, same, temperature, as in hot water, giving you the that pure water atone WSs tetera richest, soapiest lather youhave = gure, water—but 0 not —e This leaves the blankets softer and fi Put through a loose er, but do not twist. inthe sun, Wash blankets in lukewarm euda, and dry in the shade, At grocers, druggists and de- And so wonderfully cleansing parting stores. Lever Bros. is the Lux lather thatit dissolves | Co., Cambridge, Mass. LL K ever seen.