The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1917, Page 6

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ag a VAR’S GREATEST MORTALITY | essons The allies are “rushing supplies” to Italy. In the meantime, presumably, the Ital- jans are getting along as best they can with- out those supplies. Which consist in what? For the time being, shells primarily, say the news dispatches. But a number of months ago Italian | Statesmen indicated unless coal and food, as well as shells, were hurried to them, it would be impossible for Gen. Cadorna’s brilliant activities on the Isonzo front to HE SEATTLE STAR 1907 Seventh Ave. Near Union St. eee OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NRWSPAPERS|| ‘Telegraph News Service of the United Prees Ansocte Entered at Seattla Wash, oe : fe Mail out of city, ie per month; 3 months, $1.15: ¢ months $2.00; )) ear. y_carcier, city, te @ month. me } Datty by The Star Publishing Co. Phone Main 600. Feivete rueheage aneeting oe! armas A man startled his companions one day by saying:| men, somewhere in some primer class in the United | a future president of the country is learning his} |B. C’s.” And it was true, literally true, that at that) there lived in the country some little chap whom fate, lity and circumstance would mark out for the highest) in the world. And that leads to the solemn thought that we can estimate how much damage to the world the Ger- kaiser has wrought by bringing on this world-war. It ‘mot merely the loss in men and money and material he greatest loss is that of precious human brains. Brooks, a superb young English poet, died while on at Gallipoli. Francis Ledwidge, a born Irish singer, killed in action in Flanders. So the known cases of loss could be cited. there are thousands of cases that are not known that, therefore, cannot be cited. Among those now ly dead there was probably a youngster who had in the seeds of an ability to make of himself the greatest since Milton, or the greatest dramatist since Shake-| or the greatest novelist since Balzac. Among those im an unmarked grave there was probably a youth 9 had in him the peculiar bent which would have made him a greater Edison or Marconi. are, among the dead, young men who would | fe done service for the world in all the arts and sciences | @ industries which make of this a better place in which | and work and dream. All this potent youth, all this! oped genius has been destroyed. There is a sheer criminal waste to the world. Things have been lost (ean never be replaced. | “KERENSKYS AT the front! Hub! Which front—going or, j THE WoLr of poverty at many » door was unleashed by food price| 2 ; | CAMOUFLAGE FOR spinsters of 1930: “Alas! MY lover was killed R reak a Cold In Few Hours dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” relieves the cold and grippe misery—Don’t stay stuffed up! comes instantly. dose taken every two hours un three doses are taken will end Misery and break up a se cold either in the head, cheat, or limbs. Promptly opens clogged up now and air passages in the head. feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, | soreness and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed up' Quit blowing and snuffling' Ease your) throbbing head! Nothing else in the | world gives such prompt relief as) Pape’s Cold Compound,” which! comts only a few cents at any drug | store. It acta without aasistance, masty discharge or nose run-| tastes nice, causes no inconvenience. | felieves sick headache, dullness, Be sure you get the genuine. SAVIN Satyit Try | THF Brunswick YOUR PROBLEM IS SOLVED Because The Brunswick Plays ALL Records With each Brunaw! come ¢t reproduc These are instantly in changeable. So for ev type record you may the proper needle sapphire ball, This great ac’ with others equally vanced, makes THE BRUNSWICK the final type Phono graph —all instrumentr in one. All records are at your k command, all artista, or cheatras, ban ALT MUSIC. The Prunswicl alone—of the finer Phon ographs—offers this un restricted selection includes Pathe fow enjoy * This the wonde Discs. Hereto were permitted the famous Pathe MURATORE — ana Pathe artista. wick tone ia un ble because of the sound chamber @ violin. all-w Price, $32.00 te $1,500 built like Who, now, is ¢ yr with lesser Hear THE BRUNSWICK first—thon compare. Not: ul ite advanced and exclusive features. You'll say, too, that it Is the one Phonograph yo ave always wanted. Seattle Music House C. J. CASSUTT, Prop. ‘hone Main 3139. 1216 Third Avenne, t with a one-record Phonograph = tions? i] CO STAR—FRIDAY, NOV. 9, 1917. From Italy---and Part We Must Do From Now On), continue. Coal was particularly import- ant, for without coal the wheels of Italian industry—munitions and other factories— would necessarily stop turning. All those things an army in the field is dependent upon were in turn dependent upon the fuel situation. Is the apparent Italian collapse due to failure to heed those early appeals? With- standing the fire of the German big guns with bayonets and fighting spirit is a bad business, as demonstrated previously in Russia and Rumania. It can’t be done. Then Let Correspondent Lyon Give You an I You go into the dining room with | . LYON & ravenous appetite, figuring on & Star Reporter With Gen. Pershing’s| nice, juicy steak with Preneh fried Army potatoes, etc, (You knew the kind (Passed as Censored by Major| war correspondents eat who have Frederick Palmer) PARIS, France.—Said an army of ficer just arrived tn France from America: “It seema al most [mponaible to arouse our people to @ realization that they are ina great war, We'll have to have cas ualty Mata first.” The French peo: | ple don't need | casualty liste to remind them. Rv. | Uberal expense accounts) Hut there is no meat The waiter is grieved because you've forgotten it ls Monday “It ls prohibited to eat meat on Mondays and Tuesdays, monsieur,” he says. You soon find that Tuesday ts) the black day for eating | On Tuesdays jou can neither eat reat nor pastry, Pastry is also for bidden on Wednesdays. | About 40 per cent of the people in Paris eat their meals in restau ranta, and thene restrictions on meats and pastries have resulted in ery hour of the| enormous savings of food supplica y y war is tm] If your = re at =the preased on them—| dark, you try turn ¢ whenever theyltric lights soon after supper. eat, sleep, talk,| theres no light travel or seek amusement | The very minute each evening And what goes for the French| when “the lights come on” bs fixed also goes for the thousands of| by law. Conservation of coal again Americans now in France If you burn kerosene in lampe or | You arrive at a hotel and, nat-|gas in your cook stove your con | urally, the clerk tries to induce you | sumption is limited to 65 per cent to take @ room with a bath, if he | of what it was before the war | has any such luxury to offer Only the rich can afford to run Pretty soon you come down to | autos any more, because gasoline in the office, storming France now retails at $1.29 a gal “There's no hot water in that/ jon. It makes one smile to recall bath,” you complain. the storms of protest in America He shrugs his shoulders and) about a year ago when the price of smiles. You want to choke him. [the julce got up to about 25 cents) Coat la guerre.” be says “It is a gallon. ! the war, We are permitted to have hot water only on Saturdays and You go to the theatre, and after the performance you wonder why Sundays, We must be economical | everybody rushes away pelimel! for with our coal, you know.” the subway entrances “Cost In guerre”-—~"It is the war"| You follow leisurely, only to dis in almost a national motto. over! cover, when you arrive at the sub here. No matter what the troublelway, that “the last car is gone.” fa, blame it on the war And there are no 1” for TE D. B's LOOK AT CHILD'S COLYUM TONGUE IF SICK, va rsascnins 7 (GROSS, FEVERISH Say Bo, my luck is the toughest yet, | Hurry, Mother! Remove poi-| | The grafting is few an’ seldom, tales that I used to tell to get 3 ee = “ ~ sons from little stomach, liver, bowels. The rhino-—the sobs that held ‘em, Give “California Syrup of Don't go more, an’ when I brace ‘The easiest boobs, they jar me Figs” at once if bilious or | constipated. | ? | | With “Beat it, bo, or I'll punch your face, Why don’t you go tn the army?” I used to gnaw at a piece of crust With a look that was starved an’ holler, An’ the damen would look at me sad, an’ just Come thru with a half a dollar; I could mooch two-bits ‘cause my | chest waa bare, | But now from their cash they bar ine, | An’ say, “There's khaki that you can wear | An’ there's lots of food in the army.” They tell me the army life is hard An’ I'm pretty blame soft an flabby Bet) et pee 4! Look at the tongue, mother! If An’ the world is treatin’ me| Coated, it is a sure signa that your shabby little one’s stomach, liver and bow ‘They say that you can't get boom,|el# need a gentle, thorough cleans- but then jing at once. That stuff does nuttin’ but harm| When peevish, cross, listens, 0, pale, doean't sleep, doesn't eat or An’ they might make me a Man/ ®t naturally, or is feverish, stom again— jach sour, breath bad; has stomach join the army!| ache, sore throat. diarrhoea, full of ° | cold, give a teaspoonful of “Califor “Such a question (recognition of ia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few the union) could not be arbitrated| hours all the foul, constipated because it is not considered an ar. | Waste, undigested food and sour bile bitrable matter."—Pacific Tel. @|Kently moves out of the little bow Tel. Co.'s statement. [els without griping, and you have a ee | well, playful child again. “Do you suppose,” writes B. E.|. YOO needn't coax sick children to that when Gen. Sherman said | ‘Ke this harmless “fruit laxative”; they love {ts delicious taste, and it | always makes them feel splendid So I'm thinkin’ Ill ee hia wite?” | eee Ask your druggist for a bot On the other hand, we met one| (le of “California Syrup of Figs,” who had failed to eat meat for the | Which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for crown- first day in seven years and he boasted as tho the kaiser had eur-|P* Dlainly on the bottle. Beware ee dar |of counterfeits sold here. To be And then, of course, there are the | Ure you get the genuine, aak to see Meat as usual” follows. | that it is made by “California Fig . ; | Syrup Company.” Refuse any oth er kind with contempt. We Meet a Few Whose Talk Indi- |-———___- a cates as Mach | The Easiest Way Experiments have shown that an | average-size individual may require from 1,500 carloads of food to 6,000 a day —Minneapolis (Minn) Journal. | see to End Dandruff ‘There in one wure way that never Editor Moat Anything: | fails to remove dandruff completely I have to take my wife and chfl-| 4nd that i# to dissolve it. This dren to the movies twice a week.| detroys it entirety, To do this, Do you suppose General Sherman | Just get about four ounces of plain, ever sat thru a movie comedy?—{ Ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at Wd. {night when retiring; use enough to eee | motnten the scalp and rub it in Business as Used gently with the finger tips In the early part of last week,| BY morning, most if not all, of just as Mr. Lewis, the well known| Your dandruff will be gone, and, three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entire Atwood st, frult and vegetable dealer, was making preparations to make a great development in his| ly destroy every single sign and steadily increasing business, word| trace of it, no matter how much reached him of the death of a|@andruff you may have dearly beloved mister, who resided| You will find, too, that all teh in New Rochell, New York, Hasten-|ing amd digging of the scalp will ing at once there, he did not again| atop inatantly, and your hair will reach home until Friday evening—| be fluffy, hustrous, glowsy, ailky worn out from grief and exhaus-| and soft, and look and feel a hun: tion Incidental to so long a jour-| dred times better, ney You can get liquid arvon at any Mrs, Lewis and her danghter| drug store. It is inexpensive, and Rosle and son Sam had not al-| four ounces i» all you will need ed his many patrons to be neg-| This simple remedy has never been cted in the slightest during his| known to fail.—Adv. 6. An elegant line of deli- en articles have already been to his stock, and as he open of evenings, what a this will prove to the public. Pitteaburg (PaA Qaklander, | is AREER REA Matern aa ee STAR WANT ADS_ || BEST FOR RESULTS | | fow and far between PAGE 6 And from all that can be gleaned from carefully censored cablegrams, this appears to be what Gen. Cadorna is up against now. The allies are rushing supplies. Altho the situation may still be saved, this would scem to be a poor time to be rushing any- thing—to Italy. The supplies should have been there long ago. The lesson for the allies is that abso- lute co-ordination among themselves is es- sential if the Germans are to be effectively checked at an early date. late stayers ‘On account of the war be sent in French Italian for Italy in for for France, in English service in prohibited after 11 o'clock,” says Ingland and the United States. For the nlene all neutral countries, French only If you've missed the last car, the All shops must be closed at chances are or stay in taxis in Paris her walk he 630 in the evening, the idea being to economize light. You can't buy a gun or pistol under any clroumsmtances during the you'l a downtown hotel, 10 after lock are nt { period of war. much fvery line in every newspaper | he can run his has been censored by the govern: | ® usually run down by ment before publication, and the| dinner time in the evening big blank spaces that so often ap- You decide to call a friend over pear are sure signs that something the long dixtance in another eity was cut out that might have given ‘Come to the office and identify “information or comfort” to the yourself, you are told by the oper. enemy ator, and you have to go many And as to photography—you al blocks to a telephone substation and then you are told you cannot talk to appear in public with @ camera. if the party lives more than 65 ‘est la guerre,” the policeman miles away apologizes who nabs you and tells atrictions also govern the send you to get rid of your picture telegrams. 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