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STAR—THURSDAY, NOV. 29, 1917. PAGE 6 ccsscccucdecascceccucecccsccvevccsdcvecsacdccecuecsccevesecasucceeceetnnnnnnnetenenneT THE SEATTLE STAR 1007 Seventh Ave, Near Union St. LEAGUE OF NEWSPArERs In the dark ages of unrecorded human history, when MEMERR oF sor NORTHW HST Telegraph News Service of the United Press Association Entered at Seattle Wash. By mail, out of city, 40 __year, $3 Published Daily by exe Poste In that dim period when human history was born to the light, when the world sheok with the rage or lay sodden under the lust of tyrants, the Purpose grew. In this age, when all men read the vision of Washington, Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson, the Pur pose matures, 5; € montha, $2.00 vot city, 30 _ The Nightshirt Parade If you were downtown last evening, ran you probably Tockstep, they hilariously make their way. Tho the nightshirt parade has now been an annual affair for almost a decade, there are still many thousands | @ach year who view the affair with astonished eyes. Here and there, too, one is heard to remark that it is al-| toether an insane procedure, But, for the most part, the “crowds join in the spirit. They, too, seize the enthusiasm : the students. Their steps also quicken. Somehow, a bit responsibility that a moment before lay heavily upon ‘their shoulders, has suddenly dropped off. Time has taken a backward flight. Ah! Back to gay Back to the joys of the heart and the carefree. Nightshirt parades insane? Not on your tintype. All _ too swift come the responsibilities and the cares and the r of mature years. Always it will be a rejuvenating occasion to hear that U," “U of W.” Purpose! On this Thanksgiving day, we Americans count over our sheep, hogs, cattle, bushels of corn and wheat, our profits, our buildings, our great public works, our material possessions of every sort, and give thanks to the Giver of it all, But are not all these things which we have in bank, bin or pocket the least of His gifts to America in 1917? * Thru untold centuries has man been working upward toward His Purpose. Nations have died and disappeared for it. Martyrs by the thousand have perished for it. Little by little, often in blindness, blood and error, man has moved upward against the powers of greed, religious, governmental and all other forms of slavery, until, in this year of 1917, he is face to face with the last mighty exponent of barbarism. And at this crisis, for consummation of His Purpose of human creation, to make good all the suffering, slaughter and martyrdom of the cen- turies, to keep man’s face toward heaven and away from the pit, He calls on America. THANK GOD FOR THIS OPPORTUNITY! cross the nightshirt parade staged by the University of| MEN SHALL BE FREE AND EQUAL! | Washington students to advertise the Thanksgiving day God purposed it from the beginning, Claws and football game. It is an annual affair, Once a year, the} foree, tyranny and oppression, intolerance and ‘Btudents “attack” Seattle’s business district. | private privilege, but, thru all the stages, man, uu,” “u,” “U of W,” goes their refrain, as, marching} grasping at liberty, justice, brotherhood—the | | | Just Pink Tea Workers The head of the canteen department of the National e for Women’s Service has requested all “pink tea” bers to resign from her division. ““] would rather have one dependable woman than one nd who can’t work because they have an engagement olf or because it is their afternoon at home,” she Red Cross workers and war-workers of all types are oye the age-old problem of organizers—how to weed indifferent and inefficient worker, the person who usi: tically enrolls under every new banner, attends “ed meetings, throws a monkeywrench or two into the ation machinery—and disappears until a new “cause” a "brighter banner flaunts into view. Such women are obstacles to the progress of any cause| th which they see fit to play. Any work they touch is ded and confused by their “assistance.” All things are| : d for the purpose of producing a new pose for their! tut be an grea e vanity. (And they are many score), ~ t War work is too serious to serve as a playground. i tery thag => or For the things “MOTHER SHIP,” LATEST * Unsinkable Boat to g, Ul the submarine the -. & D. K.'s.". COLYUM THANKSGIVING By Fred Of all things for which comes near I'm thank Unsinkable nw that his boat A mystem | » he been in the pa For our soldiers | transports convoyed by a I'm thankful hI : d } |. The * to fight ing the Sick Man Sicker For Hp yg gens apn ad adpeimee yl Vir va There is solid ground for the reports that Turkey is} 104 out for food crooks.” | Batt the German submarine their own tricken over the general progress of British troops! warns Hoover. Likewise the food) 1, ,0arrls Fiveineh Gung oon | Asia Minor and the prospective fall of Jerusalem. | cooks. Pp th te coe mane a pepper Gyan anion ce engl Every foot of the land which the British are taking| pee ts and is taken ser there would be the mother that part of the world is holy land to the Moslems. To! |“ ‘amen the Calttornia, volenns, tifle journals and marine ¢ ck them up. | in particular, be | came as» the kaiser and not to be compen- eee ich the sultan’s “Chris-| Goelfish are very dumb le the holy city of Jerusalem would, and wormwood to anti-Ch for by any decoration with To ret bs oth freight and hums: ” your snoney’s worth out of them, y¢ seg mage woes <li po dog brother,” Wilhelm, might try to salve the Moslem | 7° eet ee eimming all phos an Rother tp woul 4 ‘ e ts. Jie x th : by i the bow! with an Four fiveinch caliber gune would the ma wuch Vensels a thir outers and t Capture of Jerusalem may-not be important, directly, as ilitary achievement, but its effect upon the morale of e whole Turkish people would be incalculable. Go to it, Gen. Allenby! You're a good ways off and|}\ much advertised, but you may yet “crack” Germany. Hole Thru the Swiss? ‘The Swiss are greatly perturbed over reports that one oti is the fighting nations is about to “demand permission” yt ee cca troops across their country. cent of the hotet|! We guess it’s Germany. “Demanding peetaiten® inds German, anyway. With the éxamples of Belgium Greece before them, the Swiss will be wise in mobilizing er they’ve got that hasn't already been mobilized. te used for war purposes, the fate of any would-be neu is certain. DON'T OVEREAT. sible sirplane ss be mounted on her deck, for case a U-boat is sighte mother boa: use in, insot Hut the nit un. erm at [ Time of Patriotic Preparation ) BY THE REV. CHAS, STELZLIE which can really feast on the melody making them think Its Seventy-five per waiters in Chicago are maid te German and Awe ts. That ought to help t ov FOURTH ful mp as “Mra. De § may if the reporters « N down! see Government ownership, says a m member of the Japanese industria ISN'T IT just perfectly peaceful to be mayor of this city? po ate Alp dey oy algae eee sk would work her which is wh IF DAD can’t go to fight Germany, he ean at least knock the stuf ‘fings out of Turkey today. NOW THE Sammies’ sisters in Seattle have invented swearless Many of us have already reached hairless days. some men are paed to it We have lamped a picture of regiment of Fussian #0 ing a banner with the tnserip We t Want Land co TO HIM WHO CALLED AMERICA bit his fellow and took, by brute force, the Purpose was. PYTT ITI Convoy Transports , :|WHAT TO USE TO APPENDICITIS |} Seattle people should know simple {ff} man clawed and FREEDOM FOR ALL, LEE Vox Mascutine ae) pu li —_—___—_—_-@ Dameels! We Don't write beauty Kecipes, but we'll you a tip ‘s 16 of. to The pound for Straight stuff. As how you Do things upsid Your « make a ith the Being one, but Already scalped We'll put you Hep how your Way of working It is rax0o- Firet. lay off The liquid caletmine You smear on Your dial. ‘The fellas think You look like a Aye wot ladw wpaketh it! Trick hats Pedestrians may Turn around and Orb you, but inten, Frailn, the smile doesn't Mean you're “some A joke akes smiles and ere are such as sympathetic nd when PREVENT buckthorn bark Adler glycerine. ete, as MIXED COAL costs $2 2 ton more than lump coal did n year Peace” It they really want ans un a strong, | ADDS ‘ago at the Renton mine. Oh, Mr. Whitcomb, what shall we do? to fight ein | . | SPOONFUL Adler sonatas ee THIRD, by CAB8E of sour PRESIDENT POWEI L, of Hobart college, says that the Germans) By ot |things which “Invi itations Out for bee i because cannot press . muse the an ae DO! ul matter which they haven't hot enough words in their vocabulary 1 We've) tin but with th | vationist Wedding | soned tem ‘Re objection to Col. Roosevelt sending them over a few of his best. to nted ou’ na have a ® both 4 b | ecause we } I and Mr we ter Mm At y in p the m ir daugh Lieu. | Ave St. and 4 have failed to grow t ing wa That man has & continual feast | ing tade who knows real friends, good books | Fifth and Wa he bride aaa J fine pictures ndu arriage x 4 H The richest exper to abet saul Crescent Q | ‘OMEDIES OF CAMP LEWIS Getting to Turkey Earlier by Fore Baking Powder § Will Raise The Dough Le 25 Can syscall we publish is LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Is the greatest remedy for womens ills known LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO LYNN. MASS. » lookit th’ “Lookit, Khmer, lookit, lookit: q soup wid a spoon!” poor fish, | Otting fee examining Dental Special Announcement Ry DR. ED Brown, D. Now at 100 € 1 have left ¢ t va, 4 Dental Of the corner of First ave, and Columbia t acroan the atreet my old loc because | of the war, but I do ex- ect to in Jental pract the Increa buain will offset the incren: t ne DUAinems he war. be Known an the onty ttle who did not raise nis we of the war, EDWIN J. BROWN, DD. & Beate’s Leading Dentist 406 Columbia. Peecccccccccccccecceccesese coseeseescesseeeseesseseseons LaF | Me- Dougall ¢ fouthwick SECOND AVENUE AND PIKE STREET Pre- Christmas Clearance Final reductions — abso- lute savings on merchan- dise of extra standard quality. Bath Robes $4.65 Instead of $5.00 and $6.00 Thirty only, Bath or Lounging Robes, in handsome colorings, made with corded edges. _ Vas, — \ $2.00 Union Suits $1.65 Two Splendid Numbers Men's natural gray Union Suits, forty per cent wool, sizes 34 to 44, regular price $2.00 2—Men's Cotton ribbed Union Suits, sizes 34 to 46. Two dollars in the old price on these Union Suits. The regular price on the next shipment will be higher Kneipp bine Union Suits $3.50 Three ree $10.00—(Broken Sizes) Night Shirts 75c Sizes 15 to 20 For loxen Muslin Night Shirts, plain or trimmed with wash braid, at a price much lower than you could expect in the regular way on this standard quality $2.00 Pajamas $1.55 Three Suits for $4.50 Of «plendid outing fnnel, white and colored, all sizes. $3.50 Pajamas $2.65 Beautiful for Gifts Pitty three Suits of genuine Whitman's Soisette Pajamas ta «ray, pink or tan, trimmed with silk frogs. Shirts and Drawers $3.65 Regular $5.00 the Suit Medium heavy Shirts and Drawers, eighty per cent pure wool, 4 to 42 in Shirts, 22 to 42 in Drawers. $1.25 Night Shirts 95c Three for $2.75 The lawt sale of the season of these Outing Flannel Nightshirts at this unusually low price. Sizes 16 to 19. white ninew Pre-Christmas Tie Sale Thousands of beautiful new creations for Gifts and Holiday Wear S5¢, 95¢ and 81.65. —Macbougall-Southwick, Men's Shop, Just Inside the Deer. Save Money on Your Clothes And Get Superior Value in Fabric and Pattern having them made-to-order while you may choose from our rich Scotch tweeds and English worsteds. -~By NOW, vd When these are gone, no such cloths will be available at any price! Our Before-the-War prices of $35, $40, $45 and $50 on these wonderful fabrics create a most unusual op- portunity for shrewd cloth- ing buyers. Samuen M. Stone Cove E. Stont Come in and see the goods. Y LA | cfailors 906 Second A rien niys OPPOSITE BURKE BLDG