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aay Member of the Berippe North et Leagee ot! Newspap —_— tid Why the city a heari: Why did These are The question « Is another. Q i : © side of the case. that. word. J i i a result. maintain the respec Payroll HAS Eaitor The Times lings will happen to Week of the co Rave various commit and certificates attend to, which tles strongly. T to attend one. It strikes me Quite a number of p the mayor m more) for public af Tam running #o ron again fn 1915. signing of warrants, t Mi tee me 3 is why @ntire time and salary THE DISSENTERS investi Let us hope the It should be thoro uestions |5.E. D. K.'s.". | COLYUM MORE TROUBLE THAN GILL the resol asid the callers and other a’ The It Must Be a Thoro Probe, Governor Gov. Lister started an investigation of aroused virtually the entire communit ar t 4 Even if higher gas rates were justified, the state public Beenad no right to ignore the American A criminal is given The governor's commission It gave the lie to its « Sing, tho promising to hold a hear If these facts are not contradict ander st ting meet . firs own rare le that/take frequent rests. er hind fi and have been obliged to|really how he had arrived. ‘@ loan and prospects are for ‘This is one of the reasons I have not decided to date, JOHN BERWALD, Mayor. —Davenport, la, Times. BY BERTON the Persian ‘The pacific! sought fighters biighters cause facing Attila pacifist critics, said that the guerilla prattled war. thought fought; now, we'll labors or the fighting beast, te of our Pacif do not appr so . OUR FAMBLY he's brother BRALEY Greece fought {ts war with te didn’t approve to history's version to oppose bd more. “But Greece went ahead with her every To uphold humanity's laws, - Tn spite of the fools and the/and seaside to the fireside joys. | Who “didn't approve of the! I wis, Hunnish an By Kid Brother Howard ‘This is my big brother fle saves me from licking lots of kids in fites be-| ie Would stop if they gave him a TT went on and battled He knew what the conflict was for spite of the people who They “didn’t approve of the "We won, tn our own revolution Despite those who said and who ‘War was a bad institution "And one that we shouldn't have om wh oer Prusstanized it neighbors © in the least rley. no big he'd le is chasin home He acts like he I to think hes my brot hisn. { seen b talking to Some girls on the corner the other nite wen { was com n the butchers an { sald cc on hhoam charley we got we for @upper tonite an he got red-taced nd said beet it kid an | herd the @itis ast who i was an charle ot red some more an said he didnt no, some kid aroun the na Borhood, jes a fresh pesty kid. 1 got the dikins from him wen he ame hoam write after me for be. ©atise i was wearin won of his Mee ties an why did 1 ack ) @Mart when he was tellin them Jadies how two get by a street 1 “Wanted two get tw here about tha 80 1 didn’t women iid ware t il it was bed time an them no more BD. K. 1s gratif @is efforts to raise $ the Liberty Loan guceess. Next w drive for $1.2 pear in clean week. we the Two to one @on’t plug out Wednesd Caesar's trip thru the om pared V @nsen’s little saunter into Ital adit ) delay a minute COLLECTIONS ce 8 Ld r you are TRUSTS I don’t care whether we have ea ue GENERAL BANKING turkey for Than) ng or not,” | !u x 1 4 writes L. W.S. ‘ wife is learn- | ¢ x ing to camouflage around steak \t for the big dinner and fool the kids | 4 a and me.” t 3 ee th GUARDIAN git Mt. er Park man takes tn |¥ , TRUST AND SAVINGS is war garden ry night and ar ug places it near a radiator while |\; J© cheerfully refund your BANK Sone of his neighbors lets hia stay | be w wu Accept only. the ‘ B Out all night, but covers it with) Kidneys. ae goes of inal GOLD MEDAL Haar Com Bee aera ® newspaper. ponent ar, brig du apsules, None other gen- coated 1 eon ne see of t me we'll start m for anoth. Al es girls Mack STAR—WEDNESDAY, Puptianed Datly by le Star | " BY JACK JUNGMEYVER To safeguard the American fol ler jam ts enlisting the in the training camps, Une world's keen the Seattle gas rate case, which has jest detectives ; | ‘They are the highly trained ape: 1 her | ABeaa te ' ! tart clalists in preventive medicine n hot end with a me bacteriology and sanitation, who! id searc have placed the United States in the public service commission boost the gas rates without giving |the van of health conservation Their work le to detect and prevent the encroachment of the deadly mosquito, rat, fh fly and other plague carrie who are Germany's most effec tive allles about our canton. mente. ; The fighting effictency, hence ths Service COMMISSION | yeaith, of every Sar han been it of the city of Seattle to present its | vatued at $10,000 by the govern The city of Seattle didn’t even get)" 1 late a specific promise to hold a hearing tly be ignored. é question of fair play, and DECENCY, cann lig hat one rt h ng; th nal Not Limited to Doctors And it is to keep him fit as such . iW a high da ch h he committed an even greater wrong. It broke its/* sia priced machine that these yn promise, It rendered a decision without a hear-|ing caited to supplement the regu rin nd setting date fc lar army medical corps : ng and setting a date for it. ‘ To make the American army the Thruout, it has acted like a common shyster. Public faith in it is gone as ne ‘ : re ed, Governor Lister cannot afford, if he is to TODAYS t of the state, to have such a board 'STICKING TO THE ROAD They started even on the road of life. It was in a valley. One insisted upon climbing a hill adjoining to see] lk the goal ahead. The other plodded along. “Why don’t you come with me onto the height to find out what your goal is?” the climber asked “Whatever the goal, I'm headed toward it,” plodder. “How do you know you are on the right road?” the Iclimber questioned. | “Because it is the only road,” the plodder said. The climber was ambitious. He wanted to see ahead, He was always leaving the road to ascend adjoining hills} to study his goal and see whether he was approaching it rapidly enough. That was all right. But the road wound around. And at every turn the ambitious climber left the path to spend a day in toilsome search for a short cut. He wearied himself by his spurts of ambition, and had to AN THEN WELL SWIPE 1S GATE AN’ EVERTTHING ! answered “HALLOWEEN Prors, £4, WoT | The plodder had no ambition, in particular. But he stuck to the road And when he reached the goal he understood what it was, and enjoyed it, without knowing To be a plodder is not the highest, not the truest is wr pat it to better than being th f climber wh NAMES COMM | t it is t t rt er who is ease teeta to ail Sab iat weak bentae Spee poly a TO INSTRUCT FOLKS ON FUEL ECONOMY A few geniuses will beat the plodder. Most men are} not geniuses. And the plodder will beat all the rest of! them. | Darid Whitcomb, federal admin. pnt aes ietrator for Washington, has ap | pointed @ committees to work o | AUTUMN—THE HOME SEASON [methods for the conservation | Summer's the time for wanderlust—and autumn’s the fuel dustrial plants, and to in uct firer and engineers © these methods a in |time for home. | With the first cool, rainy days of September vaca-! no pl | Pee ; P The committee tncludes Archi |tionists feel a lagging interest in the lures of the gypsy|paia & Downey, W. N MeBrias, trail and turn their steps away from mountain and orest |i wee r, C. C. Moore and 1. H. Rotten. Administrator Whitcomb says __. Mother Nature herself gave them the hint by draw-| 01°49 per cent of the national coal ing about her beauties the first sleepy veils of haze; by| consumption ts accomplished by the jearpeting the woods with thick beds of leaves for her forest |ratiroads and power planta. These |children; by setting her squirrels at nut conservation, and| bodies employ 250,000 firemen gathering her birds for noisy conferences before their) O™Y 20 per cent of the coal ts 2 jeonsumed in domestic wu southern journey. Mother Nature wants her annual nap,|—_ essences tlaen so she y wns and drowses before her summer guests with! 4 her frank suggestions that it is time for them to go home. ‘FOOD SOURING IN And when the gusts of frosty October nights scurry the| brown leaves up and down the quiet streets of the town| we draw the shades, trim the lamp to a warm glow, light |the crackling fire—and settle into the very heart of home. | How good it is to be at home—at home with the peo- jple who mean all the world to us, and where even the jchairs and tables, lamp and fire, familiar possessions that are mere THINGS to others, are to us the symbols of the labor spent to gather them in this charmed circle of HOME, Now’s the time for books, for friendships, for the flowering of all the sweet intimacies of family life and the heaping up of eternal treasures of love and memory. Wonder what Winter and spring and summer are very good, but with] ach | “Pape’s Diapepsin” relieves stomach distress in five minutes upset your stom ich portion of the food did autumn we find the fruits of the whole year heaped|the damage—do you? W: don't together upon a single altar—the hearth-fire altar of|>other. If gassy and 1 and |home. what you just ate has fermented | and turned sour; head dizzy and | =a 2" am aches; belch gases and acids and |\STRIKES WANTED eructate undigested food; breath The big bakers refuse to co-operate with the food ad-| itt wane . cow! Just take a 4 Dhapepsin to help ne ministrators in lowering prices. The food administrators|tralize acidity aod tn five minutes decide to force the bakers, by means of government license, | ou Wonder what became of the tn-| and distrees Whereupon, th their making of Such a str big bakers threaten to strike by suspending|“‘€estion and ¢ bread. |day know th ke by the big bakers would force the big|have dyspepsia A i en and women to- at it is n es to A ttle Diapepatn housewives to baking their own bread. And we are for n the’ stomach cnth & eit weetened and eat their favor We suggest that the fellows who get rich storing| ‘i¢ oar ee : yosn't take butter, eggs, cheese and poultry and those who pack or|care our liberal limit without can meat also strike. What our food situation needs is} tebe that the folks do for themselves, in their homes, what|/"''o™ : they have been paying handsomely to have outsiders do| jist is. Pape's for them. conta only fifty for a large c on « truly won entation and wht, #0 really We haven't strikes enough that strike indenendence| ane at into the consumer. fer rug stor BROTHERS IN BLOOD A wonderful and using sight was recently presented in the ancient city of Constantinople, when Wilhelm of the Hohenzollerns, emperor of Germany, and the sultan of the Turks and titular head of the Mohammedans of the wile I embraced, exchanged flowery compliments, ana gave each other high decorations of their respective empires There was no reason why they should not be as thick a thieves. Tho one is a European and, supposed a Chri |tian, and the other an Oriental and a Mohammedan, never theless they were brothers in blood. BANK OF CALIFORNIA NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SAN FRANCISCO erty B ond will berty pomit It does not take much imagination to fancy the hand Sam of Wilhelm of the Hohenzollerns incarnadined with the * 3935 | * : >, 2.00 blood of Belgium, France, Serbia, Poland. terest If he borrows $0 from It does not take much imagination to fancy the hand tak Today ‘es the day to invest In of the sultan of Turkey crimsoned with the blood of th YOUR LIBERTY BOND. Armenian and Syrian Christians, SEATTLE } Both men are inspired by t ame purpose—the lust . wo1 Reta t and blood GOOD-BYE BACKACHE, KIDNEY for conquc We Render an Exceptional Service In INDIGESTION, GAS, OCT 31, 1917. PAGE 6 United States Spends Millions to Foil Little Allies of Kaiser 3Qp Hundreds of Experts Employed to Make Cantonments Safe From Infectious and Dangerous Germ Carriers | thealthiest the world han ever] Employ Hundreds of Experts known if the patriotic ambition Hundreds of ex sniverat that has fired the nation ties, state and al health It means that them flitary health| boards and rese stitutions organization 1s no longer to be|have proffered t b boty and pi mited to doc but to the ner of the Amer ) that It will be broadened to utilize | lean fighting x ra they : the besth rains of the * » being absorbed into the army medical world Il tte branche health service In many of the cantonment veya have The movemer ered and is tod number allies who scoff at the world beast inetitutions in ventive appa t i ' wetting that Mies and mosq at civilian discover ; H shi ‘98 were deadlier thar sh bub ing mosquito breeding within re lets, and that armien have been feet of the tents, and the old the vanguir * © sanitary r of the med bdo These men, however, are in the 1 corpe an | nA minority. altho malaria e Today the sanitary corps has and water inspection has been reorganized along broader and acient thoro. In more etive lines to w ze to the on with and mosquito utr the special talents of m on around camps, Uncle, traine to field sanitation and nee are gol venive medicine the loune - — — » flea that car ti annrnrnnnnnnrnnannnnwaann| plague from the rat to human be 5 9 watt 4 other sources of danger. il M4 ] } 6 and the old | Editor’s Mail | .cnctsis0* ce LAAnnnnnnnannnnannnnnnnsces | t lieve these patriotic T FIGHT Edite pha ef bs c m has no done bis full duty aca teoaueas to the man who must face the been allowed te the y. Ha en TRE of them have died r on the +d w= field of battle. A large number of British sub jects in this institution earnest efforts are making to be released in 7 COCOA | order to fight the common foe, Will 4 fn | d |the American public help us? thn bonun sorermmeot mo a is pure i | Deadly allies of the kaiser skulking around American army train. standing offer to defray all ex-| F Ing campe | penses incident to 4 it |{f cr It Is to check and prevent thelr ravages that Uncle Sam has|members of St. Andrews, St I" Purity in cocoa means en pointy the shrewdest medical detectives in the world in hi oe Favs -— cea Bg rye tee carefully selected, scru- a The rat (No. 1) Is a carrier of the bubonic plague germ. So ie) nish Information as to how this car | pulously cleaned cocoa als the flea (No. 3), which tranamits the germ from the rat to man. be egy ni toriiacat ree } beans, scientifically the Anopheles (4), the m: to, 1 lark Hh fever SON, No. 8034, Infection. satay (al oapbiier pvreotar ama acaalintes Wala Wale VY blended, skilfully The common house fly (enlarged head shown In No. 2) pollutes| roasted, and with the food and transmits di germs of all kinds. TELEPHONE STRIKE ) Either singly or in company they are a grim company, and could rapidly wipe out an army but for Carried Stars and St Dy United Press Leased Wire NEW in that terrific for him. Gunner Clancy » comfort package cont will medal from ot tt, but in addith the U Fund” ia now Eng. & letter dated Septemd "My Dear Friend convalereing at writing these few | cumstances | am fn. am the individual who carried the day 1 shed blood each time. the cause of humanity. “Hut, my friends, there te 1 am months. Ridge, and sent me a pict thruout the United States. have seen it “As lam gotng to ka granted, and that is, if you p! you send me a field comfort box as I have not tasted American a day fighting, and now I am in Engl buried alive When I raw longed for one. I do long and which I recetve will not assure you that my wante are dier’s Ife in hell for my time t "My pay As at I want much obliged “I beg to remain, very ¢ * written to this country asking for a ning rome to this he will receive a handsome gold package was today sent by the “I have been tn this world war for a period of two years and a few months—wounded on three occasions, and, of course, my father, and I have not heard from him for a matter of five He wrote to me about the deed I performed at Vimy 9 which appeared tn all of the papers 1 would venture to say you might It would be a good comfort to me, I assure you “Juat picture it to yourselves a of people who have and, after recovering from being bought bonds who do not wear the picture of the comfort box, I their buttons, so there must be| wish I had one. But the money several thousand others. keep me in wants and desires. I It seems to me that a Liberty American soldiers comfort box if I could be given one my friends, is only one shilling per day (25 cents) ff conta some over here, it will not enable me to get what Do you not think I can have one? cR WILLIAM G. The public is YA excess of fat removed, Editor The Star eclentific vigilance jed on all sb preg reduced to an extremely ite Bd eee atened telephone strike On one side of the controversy (i ee oe j a mi are ab 800 young women, the is rocess, NO ripes at Vimy sicet br them fi pad n-|| Peete bet dey Rid did b ble aspirations, st pg against |)| chemicals ng use idge; Wounded, He Asks for Tobacco] sin) discours sto become |) the finished product useful citizens y of them are YORK, Oct. 20—Gunner William G. Clancy, the aiding thelr parents to meet the containing no added Texas boy who carried the Stars and Stripes “over the top” || family expenses. They are unfa mineral matter. ttle at Vimy Ridge, has a surprise tn store | miliar with the commercial gan }and, in their innocence, do not AND _IT_HAS know how thetr parents and neigh bors are being systematically flin flammed by the tricks of business American tobacco, and he A_DELICIOUS FLAVOR Army and Navy Bazaar. The comfort and plays in politics Trade-mark on évery ple “Our Boys in France Tobacco Thoy can see that they are secur genuine package ; ing little return for bonest service Booklet of choice wi This boy, who carried Old Glory, and wae wounded tn doing while a few higher-ups are accum recipes sent free $. 17 Lindsay ave, High Wycombe, | ulating fortunes 2 | by | Oa the other side of the contro er 28 Gunner Clancy says | versy are & dozen or two shrewd, Made only by x I take pleasure as well as liberty in f/ careful, conservative, calculating, Ra sto let you kind people know what cir. [j| farsighted men, proficient in ma WALTER BAKER - Iam very glad to tell you people that I nipulating politics, trained in the| 8& CO. Led do: the Stars and Btripes over the tricks of business, playing the| i. top at Vimy Ridge April 9, 1917, and I was buried alive later in || fAMe to wecure products of honest | ’ labor and profits on honest indus | try for those same higherups | DORCHESTER : | They are more concerned about | deriving returns on watered stock |than fn sacrificing something that | will help thetr employes to become useful and honorable women. That | Problem they leave to others. | JOHN C. RATHBUN, University Station. glad I offered my services for no one who writes to me—only WEAR BUTTONS Editor The Star It has oc curred to me that it might be a good {dea to encourage people who e bought Liberty Bonds to wear . aa I personally know favor of you, I hope it will be lease, now, could you or would 7? I feel eure I would be pleased, cigarettes or tobacco for many & 1 have been over in France not many, as I have had a aol Bond button, alongside of the little in this war, but I would want an American flag we are all wearing these days, makes a mighty good combination H. D. GLADDEN ® I will be ever so ruly yours, Would be pleased to have all our former patients call at the office and have their work done by us CLANCY.” ‘SOMESOLDIER SLANG Need With This You rte ndent By a 8taff ¢ ? CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Oct. 30.—For every million fighting soldiers’ terms has been com- plied for the benefit of those who may desire to converse with friends in the service but [AMUSEMENTS j TONTON METROPOLITAN 410 'wrrx (oe “Arse a} | Nights and Sat. Mat., 50c to $1.50 MOORE THEATRE] ORPHEUM VAUDIE HAR Lay WILKES}: Si Fitth and Pine, — Filitott ases-25e0 Tonight-—All Week—Mate, Wed., @at A daring, vivid Heart Drama “Outcast” Mat's EW PANTAGES | Mate, 2:30. Nights, 7 and 9 Rigoletto Bros. and Company Witlard—The Man Who Grow Other Acts 10c and 200 Continuo: 1:16 to 11 6 BIG ACTS OF HIPPODROME VAUDEVILLE | It is unnecessary for you to suffe: | with eczema, blotches, ringworm, rashe and similar skin troubles, A litue zen obtained at any drug store for 35c, o $1.00 for extra large bottle, and promp ly applied will usually give instant relic from itching corture. It cleanses an: soothes the skin and heals quickly anc effectively most skin diseases, Zemo &@ wonderful, penetrating disappearing liquid and is soothing tc the most delicate skin. It is not greasy is easily applied and costs little. Get examined, and {if any defects misfits, we will gladly repati make over free of charge. This is a unique business, based upon logical fundamental _prinet- | ples of charging only for the service jdelivered plus a small, certain, never-varying profit, you pay for you, and you alone receive We maintain our own laboratory, / }and buy material in large quanti- ties and conduct our office on busi- No Guide at Lewis who are now prevented from doing so because the “boy hae cked up the most amazing ang.” The “C. 0.” is the commanding it today and save all further distress | ness principles. | stow ee tee. company, while a The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O, Trained nurses always in attend 00 own on ooks as - | ance. Heutenant, and a “noncom” as ——— — Se — | non-commissioned officer. Are you looking for cet PAINLESS AUSTIN, Ine. Dentists Third and Pike Sjum guilion” ts a dainty term | for any article of food served at “mess,” which at home went by the | ? Read Star Want Ads, iain eid wialiostel Bea Fashion’s Latest Ideas | | name of breakfast, lunch or supp Kitchen police” {8 a term ap-| piled to designate dish washers, | masculine gender. “Bunk fatigue” is much spoken lof but not much practised. It ts a |combination of the noun, “fatigue” | which in the army means hard ese e j e ansive ickciaad “beak cebleh Wa plese are Presented | in our extensive to sleep. A soldier engaged in| display of Coats for street, “bunk fatigue” extends himself in & supine porition on his bunk and gives himself up to quiet, re: motor and afternoon wear. meditation while his companions Developed in the beautiful new are at drill materials such as Crystal, Pompoms | “Horse” is meat, usually salted Wool Velours, Silvertone, Bolivia, Burel | meat las and Broadcloths, tn all the exquisite The “top” sergeant is the rank {ng non-commissioned officer of the company | k private” ts tn line for prow to general but ts some wa wn the | In fact, he ts] so far from or 1 that he nee new colorings for Fall and Winter wear. Pirate Red, Pekin Blue, Bur. gundy Terra Cotta Russian n, Taupe, Beet root and Reindeer are some of the favored shades. ~ = ~o a telescope to see the general husk and 60 Glbka 16 the Gther and Smart individual touches are achieved hat & step would get him|f bY collar and cuff trimmings of handsome arvice. | fur and fur ‘fabrics and fancy buttons | is a term applied when hash is served. It ts an abbrevia.! tion of the term, “same old stuff.” | | | ‘PROPOSES CITY OWN Our Millinery Department is replete with all the favored styles for Fall and Winter wear. A GAS PLANT ITSELF jf | vedoagpe | gah | Atm luncheon of the Munietpal| Mf | Our System of Credit } league Tuesday Dr. HH. Gowen, | ff | which makos it possible for you to } |professor of Orlental languages of ff } {Tess well on small weekly or monthly | |the University of Washington, gave | {| PAyments a8 Suits your convenience, } a talk on the “Responsibilities of American Nationalism.” Jackson Silbaugh recommended | that the city have its own gas plant | Jif the Seattle Lighting Company is| allowed to raise {ts rates. The experience pf being tor pedoed by a Geran submarine was told by Capt. Johan Flemming. Westberg & Childs, Inc. | “The Credit Store” 1312 SECOND AVENUE