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ern forces It looks as if Germany’s superiority in she feels the weakne the matter of transportation, secured thru years of organization and systematizing, is enabling her to largely overcome her iy- feriority in man-power, now that Russia | has become weak in every respect. Von Hindenburg announced that Rus- sia must be beaten first. isn’t yet beaten, but there is no present great danger from her tremendous man-payer, and Ger- many takes many divisions from her e | many sets what may divisions upon Italy, ing. The Balkan regio be descended upon. Austria yells for promptly gets it. have been yelling fe late. o . ¢| Typhoon of Fire | Drives a Wedge ¢o NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS nited Prees Association Fash, Postoffice as Second-Class Matter 3 montha, $1.15; 6 montha, $2.00; ' de a month. 0c per month $2.60. By carrier, cit as peeebed Dalty by re Star Po! cha ‘A JOB FOR THE RED CROSS Dr. Albert Parker Fitch, a Red Cross inspector just from France, made a special appeal in Washington | other day for the boys who are to make up Pershing’s | He peiuted out that when the French soldier gets leave absence from the trenches he goes straight home to his ones. The English Tommy is sent across the channel. the American boy can’t travel 3,000 miles. He will bound to spend his little holiday somewhere in France. Naturally, most of the Americans will turn toward the great romantic city of dreams. And that is the Red Cross should come in, according to Dr. Fitch. | is his vision: A great building right on the Place de l’Opera in the heart of the liveliest section of Paris. In this build- ample quarters where men could get a clean bed and smoking and lounging rooms. it, best of all, there should be a big, clean restaurant, hing like the popular chain restaurants familiar in| iy American cities. In this place a specialty should be | of American dishes—corned beef hash, Boston baked | wheat and corn cakes with maple syrup, corn bread, | biscuits—all the things especially dear to the Ameri-| ite. ey] right next door there should be an American? dy store where the boys could purchase the kind of | they are used to and where they could imbibe end-| ice cream sodas. To finish off, Dr. Fitch would have the Lambs Club] New York co-operate with the Red Cross, so some of | cleverest actors and comedy wg ed in the country) d take turns at entertaining the A very good program. It is eubitione: It will cost money. But the American Red Cross {s ambitious d it has the money. The soldiers in the trenches will not have much time become homesick. But when they are on leave the long- for home will hit them right straight in their hungry @OOULLEN ALBERTe {| | MONTIOIER® | Slowly but surely the British are] | driving the wedge home thru the| German tine beyond Ypres. They have called to their aid what is new deacrited as a “typhoon of | fire.” Other plunges forward fol | towea “drums of fire.” and “hur Ticanes of fire.” That's making it “hotter” for the German trenches right along. This wedge will per mit attacks upon the German! flanks if driven deep enough, and many cut the German lines. Plank attacks are leas costly In men than are frontal attacks, and usually are better ground raing® KENT MAN SLASHES WOMAN WITH oe Willam Hamilton, atlas WI Houser, 39, an employe in the condensary, is under arrest Th day, charged with first-degree mult, as a result of hie attack on Mra. Arta Hall, of Kent, with » razor Hamilton met Mrs. Hall, to whor he had once been engaged. Tuesday as she came home from a horseback ride, and alasheg her. Hamilton was arrested by an en "The Fitch plan would give them a bit of America, a it of home on the very center of Paris. They would enjoy minute of it. They would go back to the stern busi- at the front refreshed both in body and in spirit. IE BALLARD LINE BONDS | Immediate extension of the city carline into Ballard depends upon satisfying Superior Judge Calvin S. Hall it $40,000 worth of utility bonds to cover the costs can farm ire If there is a demand for the bonds, the newly created fity carline fund for 1917 is solvent. ss ise there is a real demand for the extension, there no ion that the bonds ought to be good investments. is no plan to try out a new venture of municipal tion of carlines. Ballard folks are interested primarily Mm getting service—and the city line promises that. Superintendent Valentine, of city utilities, has care- raged crowd of Kent citizens, and ‘ checked up, and estimates that the receipt of the line, iater turned over to the ee Hf extended, will be increased $260 a day. Ho ayn his meeting with his vic. | tim was accidental, that he was car. | rying the razor to a berber shop to | be honed. And the bonds are a lien on the receipts of the carline. If the receipts only total half this amount, Council- man Erickson says the line will be a splendid, paying in it. These bonds bear 6 per cent interest. Seattle must not let this opportunity to extend the into Ballard pass. It must “end somewhere.” And| Hall must be shown on Friday, November 16, that is faith in the project. 4,500 SIGN STRONG RECALL PETITION! Approximately 4,500 names have been signed to the petitions calling |for the recall of Dr. Anna Louise | Strong, alleged pacifist, from the | who discovered how to make) school board. Five thousand names | the culinary genins " punphtndene perm i out of ipo phe Boag aakateat mane are sufficient to bring the matter bey | and a feastiess day. | J. K. Witherspoon, tn charge of | | the campaign, will make an effort | WHEN THE German Junkers we beaten on the Western front. they) to obtain 10,000 signatures. Head: | smaller nation. _ quarters are 608 Second ave. Are Told How to Find Relief from Pain. Nashua, N. H.—“I am nineteen years old and every month for two years I had such pains that I would often faintand have to leave school. I had such pain I did not know what to do with myself and tried so many remedies that were of no use. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetablo Compound in the newspapers and decided to try it, and that is howI found relief from pain and feel so much better than I used to, When I hear of any girl suffering Pome as I did I tell them how Lydia E. sags Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound helped me.”— Derma Martin, 29 Bowers Street, Nashua, N. H. lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, . made from native roots and herbs, contains no “=~ narcotic or harmful drugs, and is, ‘therefore, THE PERFECTLY SAFE REMEDY to put them elsewhere, where Russia is given a licking, and then Ger- | Jand ©. | kid shoes. | harvested their radishes and turnips | burt ® Isn't your size STAR—THURSDAY, NOV. 8, 1917. ss of her man-power. be called her flying and gives her a lick- wh n may be the next to Germany's help and | urkey and Bulgaria or that same help of .. & D. IK.'s.’. |_COLYUM Professor Ge B. Riggs, of the state university © on wild flow.) ers on the "t Also, Vice Presidents F. & Keeley/ A. Goodnow, of the Milwau-| kee system, are visitors in Beattie. | eee Some one even went so far an to suggest that ponsibly Maj. Gen, | Greene And Mayor Gill wore vici . * of the old fash. thought he never What has bece foned «man who paid any taxes? All war gardeners who haven't are urged to do #0 at once and place them in the basement to dry. They | will come in handy when making « fire in the grate, The penny-wise man is coming in. to his own at last . | A Capitol Hil man who followed! the advice of the garden experts and | wae digging ‘em | ay and storing ‘em in | | : the up the ott the coal bin Rays the lady next door | “A bill always seems steepent when you're walking up . It wouldn't surprise ue a bit i¢| “And what, wd the Vieitor of | us the Rope that we ain't ae bad off) Get a box at any drug store now Germany declared war on Italy some | the Intelligent atic who tmagin- | as we think’ LEAD DRAFTED MEN «= get straightened up by morn | a od he wan a poached ogg, “what ling. Stop the headache, bilious- ae noomns to give the greatest hope to Some Chicago fellow has invented», gart Correspondent ness, bad colds and bad days. Feel A patriotic Green Lake woman ob- | ‘e Mild cases here?” a wheations ve Buch a, Ching ian't CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Nov. &—/fit and ready for work or play. served “Wheatiows Wednesday” by Well,” said the Nut, looking impossible. Lots of Seattle ree \s ©. Kirkinnd, of the field auditor’s|Cascarets do not gripe, sicken or nt nerving any White bread. Ae{ around for a plece of toast, so he tauranta serve raspberryless Taep- | otrice employed here during the|{nconvenience you the next day, titutes #he could wit ms, dough oyster crackers . ve the family pan coffee cake and o- New York's Broadway is to be| lighted from § p. m. hereafter, in-| stead of 439. We never could un-| derstand why Broadway was lighted | at 430, Why light a street before | people are up? eee | dust the Thing for Those Under Three Years An epectal features for the chil dren, Scent matinee on Saturday | and Sunday, the Hippodrome acreen will carry the film version of Elinor Glyn's Weeks.” novel, “Three Star remarkable Peoria, Il, oe WORSE LIBRE | How many Times have you Gone up to a Gent's tarnishing Store window On Second ave. And looked over The collar displa And picked out A atyle you Liked, then went In and asked For that style In the ‘aize you Wanted and the Clerk looked up The style, then Turned around And said, “Sorry. We haven't that Style tn just Now, we expect Some in this Coming week.” Then you're halt Mad and you Pick out another Style and ask For it in your Size and he Looks it up, ‘Then turns around And says, “Sorry, But we havep’t Your size in That collar” Huh, ain't it So? They never Have the style You want, and, If they have, HOW FORK THE KNOCKOUT men wonder why we fuss so much about (From a Wwawtan's Viewpoint) Soldiers in the trenches are re ported as begging for women’s fas fon magazines, If not the wom then her picture in gay attire! PAGE 6 Updn short notice Germany seems ap en we to transport hundreds of miles an army great as any ever gathered together in our civil war, and it appears simply wonderful, consider lines of communication which she has pre- served intact. the greatly extended Moscow stopped and ruined the mighty THE BUG HOUSE down, Mean a Dollar Loaned to the Government to Help, Win Napoleon, simply because he couldn't pro- tect and use his lines of communication, and had to retreat or starve. transportation have improved during the Methods of FRONT PAGE STUFF BY BERTON BRALEY Good-bye to the Nobody Homes Who shirk upon magazine covers With never a thought in their domes Except about dresses or lovers Good-bye to their Muff and their curls ir willy and simpering grin The had to make way for the girls On covers by Neysa MeMein She draws us some regular dames With eyes that can kindle and quicken Not little fool faces in frames, Depicting the type we call chicken; No, Neysa shows girls we could love And maids we'd like dearly to win We not help thinking well of T ‘overs by Neysa MeMein. Yen, Neysa, we're strong for your stuff, Your girls who have sense and discretion; Keep on, for we can't get enough Of maidens who give that impression. Your vogue is far more than a fad, So gather the fame—and the tin; Nope, there is no charge for this ad Of covers by Neysa McNein. ‘asked by some of our callers gi the fool questions | berry ple. 'Sudden Attack Brought Threat of Operatio A PLEDGE OF WAR SERVICE T. L. SHERMAN Crug stores; a doctor's prescription is not necessary fruit off that acts ax an intestinal lubricant, and disintegrates the hard lene! particles that cause no much suffering, discharging the accumulated | | waste to the sufferers intense relief indicate its efficacy rebuild and restore the weakened A booklet of special interest to those who suffer with stomach trouble| gregation to store their golf clubs can be obtained by writing to the Pinus Laboratories, Monticello, Miinois. during service. and Was Quickly of Gall Stones. Ave. Johnson City, N. Y¥., anys with severe pains, and on call! the doctor, wan stones and necessary to remove them Sherman writes: “I had heard Fruttola, so took an directed. I was quic of a quantity of gall stor tinued the treatment quite wel Tam over forty poundd lost weight Frultola and Traxo are compow: 4 from the original Edsall formulas at the Pinus laboratories: in cello, TL, and can be purchased Fruitota is a p One done ts usually sufficient Traxo i# a tonic alterative that is most effective rundown system Sent for a Bottle of Fruitola tne government transportation here Relieved and in return I'm going to have the After treating with several doctors for stomach trouble and getting no| In Spokane, he worked in the relief, Mr. T. L. Sherman, 17 Crocker | haréware sore ot MeGowen Bros. was taken very suddenly one night told he had gall| that an operation wns went for a bottle and N and have regained Monti Lesson of Preparedness Revealed Before Our Very Eye: ih but the necessities of an army past century, and erg | have greatly increased, too, the lines open to Riga, ¢ Constantinople, Sa- | lonika and Gorizia is something beyond anything Napoleon ever did. System, or- ganization, preparation have wiped out many an odd that was against Germany. Her perfected transporte ation system, | prepared especially for war pet Pg s, aided by the other side’s troubles with U-boats, | is, to considerable extent, an off-set to her | inferiority in numbers of men. HEADACHY, SIC OR CONSTIPATED | |Enjoy life Liven your liver and bowels tonight and feel great. Wake up with head c’ stomach sweet, breath right, cold gone. Take one or two Cascarets to night and enjoy the nicest, gen liver and bowel cleansing you experienced. Wake up feelin grand; your head will your tongue clean, breath sweet, von aa MAN TO building of cantonment, will be the first soldier of the last contingent of the first draft from Spokane to | take his place here Fe. Kirkland ts already here and will in the select troops from Spokane 1 ree they arrive. “I'm going to head that line of march,” he said yesterday. “I saved like’ salts, pills or calomel. They're fine! Mothers should give a whole Cas- caret any time to cross, sick, bil- fous or feverish children, because {t will act thoroughly and can no injure. | honor of leading the men from Spo- | kane.” Kirkland wants a job in the quar- termaster’s office he DIFFERENT Altho only 17, Re had come to “Join up,” and was in the recruiting | | Seah office, answering some questions | § treat liver and bowel that the sergeant was putting to | him. | ine Mr. of kly| “Look here, my man,” said the | nes, | mergeant, “are you willing to die for | that ‘ow | your country? | effects. The recruit opened his eyes with | | strong liqui astonishment | holdof “No, str," he replied; "I" up to make a German die for his."— | teeth? | Tit Bits. nd. in| ure | TO BE EXPECTED Madge—The new to! progressive. to! Marjorie—They even say he’s go Diive Tablets when you f ing to set aside a room for the con- | Ror f Her sac | eand seabox” Alldruggisd rector is very Life. As a part of our war service in this great crisis, THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THEU.S. hereby pledges to invest, in future United States War Loans, the amount of its income received:from first year premiums on insurance issued during the continuance of the war. Thus Every Dollar Paid for New Insurance Will Also the War. This action will supplement and aid the patriotic work of our Field Forces in carrying the Nation’s urgent mes- sage for war-thrift, war-sacrifice and war-service in its various forms, into the business places and homes of the people in this hour of national peril. Our Policyholders, Numbering Over Half a Million, Are Urged to Co-operate in This Effort to Enlarge the Society’s Public Service at This Time. THE EQUITABLE LIFE AS: New York, Nov. 1, 1917. URANCE SOCIETY W. A. DAY, President ‘DON'T BE BILIOU gay be clear, stomach regulated, and your liver~ and thirty feet of bowels active. . t = A