The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 17, 1917, Page 4

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|THE ‘ SEATTLE STAR | E. ID. K's". COLYUM ouldn't It Be Better to Stones at ‘Km German alr ratds over American cities within six months,” ts Private prediction the Past shucks got old Rebs and Yanks, and some that weren't either, here in the mountaina who @an shoot ‘om on the wing with a aquirrel rifle. —Guyan Valley (CW : . 2, , Va) Thunderer “If a man is living with an immoral woman—accepting eats earnings—he can easily be acai by evidence. It "t take a high- powered detective to find out whether is that kind of a man. A patrolman can find that out if ! tries.” from $17,000,000 to $13,000,000, Let's give him a benefit So declares City Attorney Tom Kennedy. ee ogee 3 the mayor’s announcement a few days ago id co-operate with the government in a real up, a number of men were arrested in a pool hall. am Made a rather spectacular showing for the moment. All| (i) WWednentay thoy served moat in men have been released, however. The police ap- rg ly got no evidence against them. From a a Yet, as Kennedy very aptly points out, the human | weekty who live off the earnings of unfortunate women The be easily detected. The box-coated gentry, a thousand- hee Pg id more guilty than the women they exploit, have escaped] py Mrs uniform consistency in this city. Put these human vipers where they belong—in the workhouse, the county stockade, or the penitentiary, they will have to do the most disagreeable thing in lives, according to their way of thinking—where they I have to do real work. Put the women in isolation hospitals to prevent the iow of disease? Fine. But that is not enough. Pag o rest there is to extol an indefensible double stand- eee Put the men who commercialize vice in isolation, too,| “One of my | put them to work. en near relatives in the TOY THAT GREW UP that's better than having relatives tm it, ien't mt? Shall I send a n most of us were young we had a wonderful toy, m poy ee with an impressive name—a kaleido- mien St. or NWWSPrarkns Nei OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE . he United Press Association oatotfice aa Second-Class Matter HLths 6 $2.00; & month. Entered at Seattle, W mail, out = ate 406 months, , $3.50 3 months, per month elty, 806 Rhy ‘carrier Ex-Gov, Foss, of Massachusetts, has been caught in the stock mar ket and his fortune has shrunk “In my favorite restaurant,” writes F. K., “they served spaghett! in place of moat Inst Tuesday and Philadelphia — religious toe cream and cake to all at the end of a evening were donated Anthohy A. Hirst (Por obituaries see page seven.) eee An Tlwaco soctety is planning to have a foodiess banquet. Why doen't the members try something new? eee loner Sign in a Northend store "The Best White House Paint on the Market.” Send @ can te Prd icy bardware ehart’™ When we held it to one eye and looked down the there was presented a brightly colored picture — and people and animals, and stars, and diamonds, without end. Each time one gave it a turn there d a change of colors, and a shift of form that made gente so strange and fascinating that it held our after a time there were so many other toys we this curious picture and dream maker—until one day ‘We were quite grown up we came upon that old toy| grown up too, only this time its name was not . It was CITY. toy grown.yup renews its fascination, for the glit- bits of glass that once made our wonder plaything human beings, and again the pictures change turn. People threading of the mighty ‘tangles of it buildings aspiring to the sky and at evening | ng into vast gardens of. winking lights; pictures | _phoagg 4 in the fierce heat of the blast furnaces and} over the great ships in the river, weaving the ex- complex webs of commerce; pictures of myriad) in schools, of worshippers in churches, of sad folk! hospitals gay folk in theatres, of workers, and dancers, | dreamers, of lovers, of lighters, of the beaten, of the hifting, fantastic pictures of men’s mightiest ee city. ASSAR GIRLS MAKE GOOD past girls went to Vassar College to acquire ts, “highbrow” ideas, and degfees. They de- their vacations to good times. , it seems, they go to accomplish something worth >, and their vacations are given up to better purposes: or instance—those 12 Vassar girls who spent last sum- 'on a big farm, doing work hitherto done by men andja crow. pecially in hotel lob it fully as well. ereby they released men for war|*!** His big game t# to | People think he’s a guy n aboat-town, In -on - big-stuff quite a He talks so oth an hear t all, So y and think He know vb t . glare, pe y’kriow | kta and with “No Man's” Flush.” the “dog.” The poor simp ts roam. ine around In a fom would ¥ step back a pace and take @ look at himself hed get at leant a hint everyt in hep him. He flourishes where there's land olf kid "1 girls, who have just returned to school, cultivated ‘acres, doing everything from plowing to harvesting of They did more than farm men usually are content for they canned much of the crops they grew—16,000 of tomatoes, 750 quarts of asparagus, 1000 quarts of berries, hundreds of jars each of beans, peas, corn and vegetables. The sum total of their farming efforts, measured in vegetables, fodder and fruit, will feed 1500 persons inter and 200 head of livestock until next year’s crops A and 9 re f squashes, + r a big theirs lives t stuff stand This rome int himeelt a in dream boobs open cheat po: ing ade all, R mber the fable balmy crow who found feather and decked himaelf ther gliding 1 with the zephyrs unt gers got wine to him and he had to mooch find other birds to wahoo? the Can you think of any other achievement of college girls past summer more worthy of the first medal of honor? heat: ‘ THE CITY car line ex This is evident to everyone except the attorneys for the 's taxation committee, Donworth & Todd. Toddle along, Todd, Rot hear the motorman ringing? went his nose higt sion to Ballard is a perfectly solvent in Weil, VOCATES OF the police commission plan for Seattle argue it, ™UCh heavy the mayor from palice polities. A case of non-support? Oh, Well, You Know What They Mean We wish to extend our thanks to Mra. John Gernes for the cigars shown WITH THE most lovely lot of civic loot In sight, New York _ city herself. And every day has been meatless day for the poor tiger, for several years past, too. OVER IN Indiana they're talking of before this saving of things stops, w Middle Aged | Women Are Here Told the Best Remedy for Their Troubles. Freemont, 0.—‘‘I was passing through the critical of life, being forty-six years of age and had all symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes, Bervousness, and was in a general run down condition, g0 it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink- hen’ 's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as age’ toa tents my troubles, Which itsurely proved feel better and stronger in every way since ig and the annoying symptoms have disap- "—Mre. M, Govven, 925 Napoleon St., Fremuat, North Haven, Conn —“Lydia KE. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound restored my health after np hing else had failed when passing through change of life. There is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms.” —Mre. Flonence Iseiia, Box 197, North Haven, Conn, instituting “coalless” days i be lying in bed all day, LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND has the greatest record for the greatest good LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINI Throw | the | tion the | if oh generally goor home| Sdeway | the chatr | to rain | | We nominate as a candidate for! of dickering finally consenting & “Four | so, and now that we are face to face The gink who smears on|with @ Port tection and a qupstion If the boob | ports his financial statement as only | make! ¢, he | crow trick in being did these times, | box of|a good representativ STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1917. PAGE 4 WOULD YOU MAKE A GOOD WAR-TIME AVIATOR? ‘Test Y ourself; “ THE “RYnS OF ‘TH ARMY" | ARB NOW PICKED BY TH BAT A perfect sense of balance and a physloal makeup that quickly re covers from dixangi® are esvential | to an Airman contemplating many rough « mblew three miles up | the clouds with German flyers, A { exacting examination, there of the Inner ears and of the of would-be U, 8. army flyern in now made the makings of a when Dy pole of the barn with | The other fellows | you could your eyes cle i wid you had “the 8. Signal corps « you becauwe ‘thy ner ears funotic These examiners ne longer blind fold the reerutte and fire a gun be hind their heads or throw a bucket ful of toe water over them to test their nerves, The exam tion now in loan spectacular, but more thoro and sclentific Mxaminations being conducted in the county-city building After the usual physi@l examina recruit, whe to take a “ight goes thru this ordeal a) THE NYSTAGMUS THST: The candidate is seated in a kind of | dentist's chair fitted with a rail in| he grips He ts told! to focus his eyes on a certain spot tn tr of him. The chair is whirled around ten times tn 20 seconds and) then stopped suddenly, The exam: | iner with a stop watch m jures the jerk of the on to and fro meek to focus on the spot control should come vined as they Recovery of neighbors says she Within 26 seconds. tho a variation of | eight more seconds in allowed at the discretion of the examiner ® THE PQUILINNRIUM OR VES TIBULAR TEST: The candidate leans as far forward as possible in with hin eyes clowed, and is turned around to the right five mes In 10 seconds and is then told his head and open his eyes. A normal person will immediately drop sideways to the right. When | FARMER ANSWERS BRIDGES Editor, The Star-—Now that a Bridges has spoken, I suppose we might an well do formality of an election and save that away with the much expense at least to the tax payers is in the Bridges says, “1 believe it interest of everyone that organised labor's choice for Port Comminstoner be elected.” He takes this way of speaking one word for organised labor and two or three for Bridges If one might be permitted is modern Atiax pack his wor iedom, I woul gent that w would the everyone intere erties—and that ore in King county auceinct statement showing the pres ent financial conditions of these | properties One of the things that | led me to file for the Port war, Bridges’ refural some months ago | i to help! 1 nui be more in ed in the Port pi | taxpay uld be a clear make @ financial statement of the Port properties, and then after « lot do what to do with the ferries, he re | | 5 per cent completed | About all we know regarding the) to ferries im that the taxpayers gre Lhe fairies | Another thing was the Port budget led by w thia year That Port budget ts ike canned soup deep mystery inside, I know of no surer way to put this country of ours in a ad pull the hole in after it, than to give the voters the power of direct h ation and then keep then »rance of what they throwing dust in time they try to} ng on oF every put myself taxpayers of this erything the want to know about these Port prop erties, and if I get in I will tell them the truth and tack my aff Javit and resignation to any and all ements I make regarding these pertion | Organized labor ts entitled to a place ir of « | and legislative or executive because, as Hridges says, uid ‘show ite confidence in the labe group. but because they | are one of the many groups that! Ko make up what we call “the | publ ut ff organized labor has not now ¢ on this Be ank Ce fn & ponition to ti ered this race to not publ rt ¢ then Fr ything t vote mimi in erill won't! representation. | except his Some all the Dry Squad’s attention to the t that Rob claims title to all the | Port of Seattle. KB M. FARMER. | into a crop of green manure, NE Editor The Star I am a very badly For some years I have been sup porting mynelf and invalid wife by keeping a sinall store at 202 FE. 65th st. We had to go into debt to buy this store, as all our savings w tled up In a ten-acre of ground day we could | which we ho go out and I We calculated to pay by selling this We have t to do #0 and} our creditors threatening to close us out. 1 * uld leave us desti | tute, no bad erippled could get no employment, and just at pres ent my wife so bad I had to let her go to the county pital, If you could help us to get our} money out of this land, I assure you | we not only will be grateful but will | strive in every way to gratitude and pre worthy of your kindness H.D. DYE, | 302 BK. 65th at Pr crippled man. upon ator unabl 8 condition im hos show ourselves UT ZEKE THE 1 Editor The Star; As a member of the Ford league, I suggest the col lecting of the tons of leaves wasted every year on th ttle ate They should be p in heaps and mixed with lime, wood ashes or any other chemical necessary for replace ment of food elements exhausted by | cropping The tremendous withdrawal and destruction of fertilizing animaln is going to reduce the productivity of the lands, unless something else tw found to replace them and their con tribution CARRIE D. SAVES McLAUGHLIN 10003 62nd Ave. 8, one ought to!» “The Hye Muset the tent is repeated with the turn to the left, he will fall to the left These tests disclose the normality or otherwise of the canals of the in ner *. @ “PAST Atter being times in 10 POINTIN whirled seconde TEST. around five the chair i# SUGGESTION TO KED CROSS Editor The Star: Thinking per hapa it would be a good idea for the ted Croms work, | would make sugeestion. I suggest that they util ine discarded knit summer under wear and white stockings to make wash clothe instead of knitting them. They would be very soft and easily sterilized. They could be fold ed into four thicknesses, the hem: turned in and with darning cot ton and ted like a comfort This is my idea and may not appeal to the Fed Cros GERTRUDE ROBE, Wash HAVE WINT Don’t Let Up on By United Press Leased Wire WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.— Clean up the garden, and sow re Now that the garden crops are all gathered, with the excoption ,of a few late plants that are not blighted by light freezing, it is time to plan for the 1918 war garden by sowing rye for a cover crop. Piret and remove al corn stalks arr e trash. If any of plants were killed by dtrenane. as the biighY of tomato, blicht cucumber or other vine. these plants » kill the spores No Idle Gardens It ts not a geod plan to over winter gather up nts. the much of meion eave the ground barren Soluble nt food will be b irface soil may be the rains, ‘The gard ald die, While 1 ine up rob «athe time this fall and seed planting time it should be growing a this wil leached away and never be between next spring crop to cover the ground and then to be plowed under «pring The best crop rye. The once at the rate strip of ground feet wi If the ground ought to 6 need for thin p should 50 feet long and 10 urpose | be sown at! ound to a ie rough or hard it tivated just before and then be cult over over Thru Frost Sow the seed between the gathered de rough frost nearly every night the winter, be cu in sow again to the Sprouts | rows of Rye ix eatment, | there is crops not yet ide ground the rye develops to be plowed under in the spring. At a cost of about five cents for a pound of rye seed, a garden 10 by 50 feet can be treated to an application of pm Thoroughness Characterizes our methods tn every transaction, and our cus- accorded every cour- nt with sound busi Paid on Savings Accounts Accounts Subject Cordially to Cheek Are Invited. Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST, DEPOSITS in this bank are GUARANTEED BY | GUARDIAN TRUST & SAVINGS BANK Corner Wirst Ave Din St. and Colum- © Balance Test stopped and the candidate, with « cloned, tries to point to the ex miner's clenched hands. If he ins a normal he will “past point’ three tmew ig nuccession before touching ands he will be marked sub-normal and unfit for @ life in the air, “DREAMS LETTERS : SENT: TO: THE : EDITOR Here in one of the favorites of the British Air Service. Note the fine chance for “close harmony.” A handsome young airman lay dying (Chorum Lay dying), And as on the erdrome he the lay), To the mechanics who round him came sighing (came sighing), These last dying words he did say (he did may) Take the cylinder out of my kidneys | fof his kidneys). connecting rod out of my brain (of hin brain, ‘The cam bex from under my back bone (his backbone the The And engine again the plano to the noer ER GARDEN| Production; Try Rye ereen manure. The green rye plants Jnoon decay when plowed under and| Anewer the sume purpose an a light | dressing of manure MRS. ROWE HAS FINE IDEA; GOOD FOR ALL 1501 35th tm going to be a good fellow on day. She ix gotng to invite six Sammion from Camp Lewis to have a r cooked Thankagiving rm F. Rowe, ave Phankagi ving Ai qood Mixer: You will find Bevo— In pasteurized bottles, hermetically patent-crowned—at rtment and d ball parks, dining and othor places wi beverages are sold. If he succeeds the first time | lay | Canals of the Ear” and “Eyes of the Sky” Go Hand in Hand; Science Distinguishes Bird From Mag to walk forward and backward along > line. STERBOBCOPIC wt tell LANCE thre that 4) EYE MUSCLE B TEST: The candidate an arrangement of two lenses makes one candie flame loo} TEST two, one ab the other The car didate moves hin head until the two © andidate flames appear in a true perpendicu church steeple appearing in @ plo lar. If the bubble of the in cloner than an approaching lis not centered the ear os or a “Blimp” closer than & | only for the depart which may conceal a lurking | ment, according to examiner ny plane, If he fails to pans thin (6) THE DYNAMIC TEST: ‘The simple test for depth and dintance candidate, with vm on, in made, he has fallen down. SOME “RECOGNIZER”! Ambassador Francis Must Meet All Comers You believe in the nelf-defination of wall nations, don’t you?” asked ¢ Ukranians I certainly do,” said the ambaana- dor in bis Southern dialect. “I cer- do, But there must be a limit somewhere.” What do you mean. the delegation wanes a ta VISION 6) Thru a reopticon must whether # the PETROGRAD, Oct. 26.—By |, Mail)}—Ambassador David Kt. | © Francis, who was first among all | diplomats here to suggest that his government recognize the provisional government in Ruy sin, after the revolution, finds himself considerably embarrass: ed, occasionally, when a delege How long ago was your Ii tion from some revolting district taken away from you?” asked Fran of Russia calls upon him, Prest An dent Wilson and Mr. Francis are evidently considered the cham pion “recognizers” of Christen dom. The Ukranians tainl dimit?” In 1760," said the Ukranians. Can't do anything for you gentle men,” said Francia, “If we recogniz ed your independence of 1760, we'd have to turn the United States back to the American Indians. We took it away from them about 1776, and their rights to self defination are 16 years later than yours.” whe recently de |clared themselves an independent | state—and thereby raised a crisis | that caused a slight upset in the Kerensky cabinet—sent a delegation | to Gov. Francia, requesting that the Mee that Gov. Francis and the United States recognize Ukrania a» United States were having their own jan independent nation. The situation | internal worries about the rights of was somewhat embarrassing for the | small peoples, the Ukrantans with American representative drew, satisfied. — § _ SPURL OS VERSENKT I don’t believe in ruthlessness, Yet if | ever had a S I'd load a ship to make the trip Across the ocean's wide expanse; I'd fill it up with certain folk Who clutter up our precious space, And wireless to some U-boat crew To sink ‘em all, without @ trace, The pallid poolroom hangeron, The hatboy in the swell cafe, The guy who reads aloud the screeds That movie pictures all display; The lout who leaves between the acts And tramples to and from his place, I'd load ‘em in my ship and grin To see ‘em sunk without a trace. The ultra noisy pacifist, The fool who spreads reports of woe, The men who brag and wave the flag While robbing both the high and low, The dancer at the tango tea— In fact, I'd fill my cabin space, With every pest that I detest And sink ‘em all without a trace! CARRIER PIGEONS | BEING TRAINED AT CAMP LEWIS Btaff Correspondent CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Nov. 17. Men who have knowledge of ways and habite of carrier pigeons are wanted by Maj. Charles Wyman head of the signal corps troops at | this camp. Whether actual work with the birds will be done at the canton ment It ts not possible to say, but it In probable that the men who vol unteer to handle the pigeons will be sent to camps in the East for «pe clalized training Homing pigeons are being used at the front to convey information from front line trenches and from spies in the enemy's territory to the headquarters in the rear PUBLIC WARNED AGAINST RATS In this time of high cost of Nving, everybody should help to kill rats, st that destroys over $200,000,- worth of f ‘ distributing 4) that cause the deatiee of untold nu bers of human beings. The ¢ and inost effective “way house, barn, store or other brutld- ings of rate is with Stearns which can be bought for 38 cents at any store. It also effectually de- stroys mice, cockroaches and wa’ bugs, that upon foods. eeicetnen Lodge Cafe i‘ourth—Westlake—Pine Cabaret—Dancing World's Largest Dry Cabaret. | 80 stuffs annually. pease prey VeTaAgve: Swiss Cheese Goulash Raviola Chile-Con-Carne These make up the usual Dutch lunch—but what will you serve to drink? For years the host and hostess have been asking themselves that same question— especially whenever the occasion hap- red to be one of those cozy little after-theatre or “ine etween-times” parties, Now, there is a ready answer — REG US PAT OFF. This distinctively new creation in soft drinks is 8p: — mappy—delicious. It is healthful with the BAe ecem be of the choicest cereals — appetizing with the bouquet and agreeable bitter tang which only choice hops can impart. It is sare to “hit the spot”—sure to encounter no Prejudices, Bevo—the all-year-‘round soft drink $e Tar Tp Bear 4 iniacy CAUTION Guard Against Substitutes Regn ceduher the crown tow Beare tie Pos. “Bev te saat ee ‘bettie eaten ANHEUSER-BUSCH, St. Louis Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc, Dealers SEATTLE, WASH, A

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