The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 8, 1917, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Warm Underwear for Less Women's Heavy Union Suits $1.50 Suit of bleached Georgia fine ribbed hygienic fleece; crocheted neck, silk drawstring. High neck, long sleeves, ankde length; also Dutch neck, elbow sleeves, ankle length; all simes; $1.75 values for #4.5@ suit. Women's Fall Weight Usien Suits 79¢ and 89e Elastic rib Hygienie Cotton Union Suits, neatly finished around neck with ribbon drawn through crocheted edge. High neck, long sleeves, ankle length. Regular sizes, 7O0¢@ suit; extra sizes, SOP¢ suit. Children’s and Misses’ Union Suits 50¢ and 79¢. Made from nice quality of bleached cotton yarn, elastic ribbed; cuff on sleeve and ankle length; nicely finished; cro- cheted edging around neck. A garment that will give satisfac- tion. Sizes 2 to 16 years. Boys’ and Girls’ Union Suits 75¢ Suit Made from combed Egyptian yarns, with hygienic “Jaeger fleece lined; fall weight; form fitting; all Sizes; T5e¢ suit. aR Women’s Wool and Cashmere Hose 39¢ and 45¢ In medium and heavy weight. Black with gray heel and toe and long ribbed garter top; also dark Oxford with spliced heel and toe and extra wide garter ; all sizes, 814 to 10%. Miller-Made Boys’ Shoes $3.50 Pair Made of solid leather, vamp one piece; extra heavy her sole, nailed and sewed. With a little neatsfoot | Oil you have a Shoe as near waterproof as you can and one that will give entire satisfaction. Sizes to 51. Made yarn, in $3.00 Misses’ Shoes $2.25 Pair Made of Dongola calf, blucher cut, patent toes, low sizes 1, 114 and 2 years; $3.00 value. Special, pair. Babies’ Crocheted Wool Sets $2.98, $3.25, $4.98 We are showing a fine assortment of Wool Sets for baby. Pants, Jacket and Cap, made from good of wools and worsteds, in Red, White, Copen, Rose, etc. All sizes; $2.98 to $4.98, “THE STORE MAT, SAVES VOU MONEY / SECONO AVENUE AT U hoy | Tree’? A Wisconsin man claims ¢xemp tion because he has three dependent Night | entidren. Hin name, by the way Only | '* Frederic Hraats. MEAT INJURIOUS TO THE KIDNEYS hurts or Bladder —Meat forms uric acid. We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, nays & well-known authority | who warns us to be y on guard against kidney trouble ; The kidneys do their utmost to free the biood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the | evereeek: they get sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and thus [the waste is retained In the blood ENLIGHTEN | to poison the entire myatem | When your kidneys ache and fee! like lumps of lead, and you have stinging pains in the back or the THY urine is cloudy, full of sediment DAUGHTER” or the bindder is irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night 7-ACT DRAMATIC when you have severe headaches, nervous apd dizzy spells, sleepless THUNDER- BOLT Take a Tablespoonful of Salts it! Bac! bothers const ness, acid stomach or rheumatiam in bad weather, get from your pharma about four ounces of Jaa take a tablespoonful in 2 glans of water before breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and | stimulate clogged kidneys, to new ralize the acids in urine #0 it is no longer a source of irritation, thus ending urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can not injure; makes a delightful ef fervescent Uthia-water drink, and nobody make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean and active Story Concerns Two Moth- ers, Two Daughters, a Man and the World's Mystery. NOW PLAYING FLORENCE REED TODAY’ way. AN UNUSUAL TITLE— AN UNUSUAL PICTURE 1f you want a dramn of 2 COLONIA 4 TH BEL PEA PINE | —ropay— L Geo. Walsh The Book Ageat” Mutual Weekly—News of the World in Pictures and Two Recls of Select Comedy “The Film Spoilers” with CHARLES CONKLIN i} | | | | | { Augmented Russian Orchestra “Olnie de Ls Admission 10c Children 5c Includes War Thx. 5 la oh os | make th STAR—THURSDAY, NOV. 8, 1917. Merry Christmas, Sammy! But It Won't Be So 1f You Don't Mail That Gift to Him Right Away Quick NOV. 15 IS LAST MAILING DAY DBP yD | How'd you like to be one of those boys over in France facing Ger liquid fire, bombs, shrapnel and shell and wake up Christmas morning nd not receive one single Christmas gift from the folks back home? Won't it make your own Christmas leas merry if you think that day hat you didn't mafl that Christmas present to Sammy in Ume eo he © it on Ch To be sure DO YOUR MAILING TO SAMMY The postoffice says November 15 te the last m intmas day? ARLY! ng day for France PAGE 4 ‘Fraser-PatersonCo. A Great Display and Sale ot 200 New Wooltex Coats —Introducing the very newest styles in materials that are 100% pure wool, and coats that are guaranteed for two seasons. Every Coat Guaranteed for Two Seasons Every Coat 100 Per Cent Pure Wool MAKE. SAMMY GRIN ‘Take Gen. Greene’s Tip! Write Cheerily (EDITOR'S NOTE — A staff correspondent of The Star, writing from Camp Lewis, Tacoma, the other day, quoted Maj. Gen, Greene as saying: “Homesickness ls o terrible thing, All of us have suffered from tI know I have. There ts just one remedy for a homesick soldier—tetiers from home, BUT CUT OUT THE SOB STUFF! * * * Weite often. Make your soldier happy every time the mail orderly calls.” Appended are two sample letters from a father to his soldier-son. They express our idea of the kind to write and the kind NOT to write) L DON'T: “WRITE IT THIS WAY My Dear Bon: Your Inst ng of the good times you | amp, has been read by a 1 your mother has taken to Aunt Mary's for them to » er for the war, polnting out the entages of fatalities in four ov of five, 1 be Jed, of some such ur mother ertatic fortitude, tb duty to go and that we a only hope that you woul ned to us safe and w if this ts not to be, then God's ne" | for you apd we are proud had the tr he» us, & read 1 am joy cam glad, my boy, that * your life and I advine most of such 5 you are allowed, for when to France your life will be anything | wi but pleasant We p We think of you constantly, and that y we are keeping your re }you had it when |the photographs pennants you wehool, your thing—so0 that you when you return chive perhaps your ish to hear the Your moth fll be ready for far from well Of late, indeed. she if you ever hy downright Her as you know. . been Rayne don your mot her by vol b you to ine lay and quite ‘ anking why we permitted 4 ts free rae 4, am, indeed, we all de ut we try to be brave and cheerful.| We need you at the etore. Young | Jook haa come in to help out, bt a been good | “I saw Clara Young in the street | yesterday, She after A small bottle of “Danderine” 82° "ae with that young Suthe boy pg ne ron you and Clara were keeps hair thick, strong, | preity wick Iam glad noth beautiful. jing came of it. She seems a flighty,| frivolous sort. When they left me Girls!’ Try this! Doubles/1 s4¥ them going into « moving bea t f h ‘ ‘ | pleture theatre ui y o} your air in @ i Well, my iad, there ien't much few moments. home news your father can give you, and i know that your mother and sister are writing. He of stout heart and give a good aceount of yourself, ax I know you will. Write = yor mother often Sometimes in the night I wake and Sl) hear her crying softly, When heaven's good time, you return to us, you know how gladly and proud |SOLDIER WHO TRIED |: | TO KILL SELF NOW | WANTS TO GET WELL By a Staff Correspondent CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Nov. & Jomeph Kalac, an Austrian select soldier from Hiawatha, Utah who tried to commit suicide nuse he didn’t want to fight his wothers, is in the hospital with a bare chance for life He is @ naturalized citizen tensely patriotic, but he nedical officers that the thought the ponsibility that he might alled upon to shoot at his brothers in the Austrian army with him at it Umer, finally he de 1 to m hn chance of such an event teaposstbie When informed that he might be placed in non-combatant service, he evinced a desire to recover. be base and told f be own Women Cache Couple % soug Cases; Booze? Nay, Rocks; Not Rye “P trolnan J. J Henghan, dry” «quad member, saw two wom uf. Within ten minutes after an ap- plication of Danderine you cannot a new ys Coperiont a7 by Copyright 157 by The Wovltes Tosiere The Wewtes Testers Comerseht 7 by pyright 197 The Wewitee Tokers “ fd The Wovites Tutors —A Two-Day Event that offers exceptional values and a re- markably large assortment of styles which are the newest and best ideas. —An important offering of new Wooltex Coats, which comes just when the first cold blasts of winter are being felt. —200 Coats—every one a new one just received—priced like this: The Big Feature Lot Beimg at $35.00 various models in the season’s favored materials and colors. Russet, Seal, Taupe, Comyrsoht 19/7 by The Weoites Testers Each Lot shows VELOURS and BURELLAS in Navy, Burgundy, Beetroot, Russian and Black. Silvertone Velours in Pekin Blue, Snuff, Forest, Light and Dark Oxfords. —Besides the prices mentioned above there are notable values shown at $75.00, $95.00 and $100.00. EVERY WOOLTEX COAT IS ALL IT COULD BE. —Pure wool materials, perfect workmanship, silk satin linings. Every Coat is guaran- teed for two seasons’ wear. —Women of Seattle will have no better opportunity to buy new Coats than this Friday and Saturday at Fraser-Paterson’s. DROPSY ‘TREATED ONE WEEK FREE Short breathing relieved im a few hours —ewelling, water and urtc removed lin a few days—regulates . kidneys: and heart. Write for Free Trial Treat- ment, COLLUM DROPSY REMEDY CO, Dept. 63. ATLANTA, Ga UNION STORE srage to bear the blow. | Star of the change of address Your loving father, We are all very well and happy. If military etiquet permits you to speak to an officer, tell Capta | Wright, if you get the ghance, that you are your father's son. We went }to college together * |" Will write again soon Your loving father, me you. Our hearts given co th ay y we will we ache. If it in fated not return, we = pr DO WRITE Dear Son; Your Inst } telling of the good times y in camp, has been read by a and your mother has taken |! to Aunt Mary's for them to read. I am «lad, my boy, that you » life, and I wish I were nough to enjoy it with yc We old fellows must satay at luck! Buying Liberty help, but it is far from ex at you shall that we be IT THIS WAY that 9 My war fi y’s Granddads Served in Civil War in Same Company In the civil war, two Michigas boys, Joshua P. Kinney and F | Sutton, enlisted In Company Ninth Michigan cavalry Twenty three years later they met tn the lterritory of Washingt en UNION CLERKS ara too soon, am in it! It will be} | food | that. I may iting I suppose T should say that war nat ng and that this the of all, but, altho » butcher's is a dre And how it war in worst ter. Now a son by that mar Jerald KE. Kinney, has enlisted in the engineers and gone to Camry Dix In New Many men, now enlisting, have had both grandfathers veterans of th civil war, but very w have har both grandfathers serve in the company thruout that war if once Idn’t quit! 2 I've n wanted 1 ldn't 4 him! su kept on lon Jersey told you; your ore, but 1 by you would if h your m¢ was afraid] Hert the next! akes me tired!| mind about Rert. He's a big, husky brute, but it tires him to puff a cigaret, and The original Ad devitallses Saaees be never dieeppointer SUNDAY, i GRAND OPENING 3rd &Universit» Frank A. Vandertip, draft wnat Star report with find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not iteh, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ when you see new hafr, fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair—growing all over the scalp, A little Danderine immediately doubles the beauty of your h No difference how dull, faded, tle and scraggy, just’ moisten a cloth with Danderine and caref draw {t thru your hair, taking one | small strand at a time. The fect in amazing-—your hair w light, fluffy and wavy 1 have appearance of abundance; a comparable luster, softness a luxuriance Get ton's Dan from any ¢ and prove that your hair in as y and soft a# any—that it has | neglected or injured by treatment—that's all—you can have beautiful hair « it if you will just try @ little derine. small ne bottle of for a few store or te Knowl conta carele DE ini ii AED er Re use, | T | ing bootlegger. en cache two sult cases in an alley Sound the Loud Timbrel— | on First ave. and Hoy st. about 6 and Twang the Hurdy Gurdy pm. Wednestay Coming to the New | erat " beuee, expecting to arrest the| man who cailed for the bootleg | FIRST and MADISON | liquor. | His curiosity got him at 11 p. m., and he and bin fellow drysquaders took the baga to the police station, where, upon opening they were found to contain the better ot] ‘| rocks: Police bell | planning to ‘ the women were! ick” some unsuspect: | | Entertain 12 Soldiers Each on Thanksgiving Da t started by BE. BE. the Coast Carton Co,, totary club in the! Wednesday, in ‘ stated that he was going j— H soldiers from ‘ Thankeiving, won over ber, who has pledged to To i. ay ‘Kentucky a a As Fr as Bright, and as New as on the Day of Its Birth | y Novel PARADE DAILY Daily Cash | ordered it iLewis, If you move, notify The |" a a he's the apple of his mother's eye The army could make a man of | Bert, if anything could I saw Clara Young in the street yesterday. She asked after you Said she'd write you if you wrote first. Some girl! We think of you constantly, boy land we're mighty proud of you You ought to hear your mother brag about you when we have call She «ets out that photograph you sent us—the showing you all dolled up in your soldier tos and she tells them that, altho you started as a buck private, you'll come out a captain at least—if the promotions are made on merit. You GAS ON STOMACH SOUR STOMACH INDIGESTION HEARTBURN! Instantly Relieved by BISURAT sr MAG Nee is top-noteh at kg re IN 5 GRAIN TABLETS young Cook in to help out. He can't take your AND POWDER FORM | place, of course, but he's doing bet ter than I dared ho You mustn't expect news in dad's mother and sister d better than subseribed f nent cor, tO AVE. a PIKE ST. Phone Main 4965 “IF | HURT YOU, DQN’T PAY ME.” This is my message of deliver Mag-| ance to you from the fear that ac the | compante 8 Dental operations ry tain correetic much home | of nh Vacidity. Tt TREAT ie ch a pe ve nthout otters. ‘our | ¢¢ m of five-rair ao ony letters. Your 4 “rele “blue | Dal in all cases but will keep you vi |p « scessed conditions ord Lowest prices in your city for the wen. ¢high-class guaranteed AORUGUISTS HVERY- STERLING DENTISTRY know Business We having without your acute ab poste I'v r to you at Camp BRB.

Other pages from this issue: