The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 19, 1918, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR), Near t on St. ye OF Newsrarens ANOT Seventh Ave EMBER OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST Lac h News Service of the United Press Association Rntered at Postoffice as Second-Clase Matt Ry mail out of city, 40¢ per month; 3 6 months $2.00; Fear B80, Ny carrier, clty, th, eattie, Wash months, $1.15 300 ‘a mon Main 600. Privete Give the boys in France a lift; Invest your money and practice thrift. You can buy Thrift Stamps at most any store, You may have bought one, but buy one more. Start a Thrift Card today. Your letter carrier will sell you the stamps at twenty-five cents each, a7 _ That “Free Trade” Bugaboo = Republican partisans at Washington point out where Neitish and American aims are not aligned. “An equality trade conditions among all the nations consenting to \ is not British. he most influential newspapers of England and some her most influential statesmen are right now promoting 50-year trade boycott against Germany and Austro- lungary. The very term “free trade” still suffices to arouse erful political forces in our own country. Certain it is that, with hundreds of newly born infant lustries in this country, when peace comes, it will be easy > have a good old fashioned high protection issue in our national campaign. At any rate, “removal of all barriers and equality of trade conditions” make Peace aim that will set the British to looking over the with care and caution. Last day for candidacy filings. His Own Grave An old man ‘of Rising Sun, Neb., dug his own grave. | } =! Boy, page the dark SACRIFICE By Berton Braley Without you, life will seem to be All) pecauee his wateh chain didn't show | his 4'4) he had finished digging and was removing the = rene, ‘ he fell into the grave and was killed. Now his eae ee in death in the graye he a. many days digging.” Hour after hour and day on dreary “Tt is rarely that a man digs his own grave, day I shall be lonely whereso'er I stray The ties that bound us two were tight end strong Newspaper correspondent dg sent out ag pgm With that we beg to differ. Most men—yes, and many | too—dig their own graves! They dis: their graves with intemperate habits, over-| Desire of you will be a goad, « pronm wn lack of — ge? of food, drink e Se ‘eee pains from morning glow to ir graves when they live in insanitary homes deena ops. They dig their graves when they don’t get |! **!! lose **t for work and Joy in food, sleep, recreation. They dig their graves they disobey any of y of naturp’s la laws. ; Of all Seattle’s clairvoyants, met one foreemw the Without you. the ‘The spell is broken, severed is thong. And joy bells jangie in a dull ding. Draw your own ‘dong. : . ‘Without you my existence will be at Wahkiki—and Our City Dads) 5:07 are naa tor ma the doo - HONOLULU, Jan. 19.—The board of supervisors of tore say ~ thee @ city and county of Honolulu has appointed a com- |4"* yy pipe, 2 sppttnatl ame to make plans for the adoption of the daylight scheme in Hawaii. In some districts of Hawaii ey sugar planters have for years followed the practice of setting the clock ahead during the grinding season. The Hawaiians, it appears, understand the economy of ting their activities to the sunshine. Evidently the action of Seattle’s councilmen last year, n they decided it was ridiculous to have everybody work earlier in the summer time, didn’t alter the s’ understanding. Without you! In an article published yesterday, Joneph MeNuity, secretary of the Pearee- , wae quoted as saying Connolly club ts just as Irteh ae Irteh have alwaye been.” What Secretary McNulty did say was th “The Pearce-Connolly club ts sugt A ae eyes as hi been 4 Soon we'll have our “hot” squads to ferret out “hod- leggers” engaged in the illegal traffic of coal. YOU CAN NAME IT We are willing to pay five for a street car ride, but that sixth cent wouldn't be fare. With lack of cold in the atmosphere, and plenty of 4 a in the basement, Seattle has much to be thankful for. . Do the news dispatehes about the mid-weet blizzards make you yearn | for a little snow? Nor ua either There's a modern Jane Who lives On our street When she's home, Which is now and then, Who told A neighbor ‘That if the weathe Kept on being So cold She was going To dig up Her summer furs And wear them . MORE THAN LUCKY Alva Mallory was recently attack od by an ugly cow while in a box | stall with it. Luckily she had no | horns, and a Gazette. There is plenty of coal for all. But there is too much.in a few places. Last year's production showed a _ 14 per cent increase. Registering for voting, making income tax state- ments and buying Thrift Stamps. Three patriotic duties. Why not do them all now? It would be some joke on. Bill Hohenzollern should _ the Bolsheviki devote an additional month of armistice to fixing up to fight Germans. ¢ King George has made E mperor Yoshihito a field marshal, and vice versa. Horse and horse. It hurts no- © body, and it’s about the only actual business function left to “divine rights.” British war board has taken a tremendous step in _ morality. It proposes to pension the widows and or- | phans of men executed at the front for crimes. Amongst other things, this war is showing some new paths to stice and humanity. he Family edicine Chest Must contain a good treatment for colds, coughs and catarrhal troubles. It must contain a reliable treatment for disor- dered digestion, impaired appetite, etc. It must also have a good tonic to restore strength after illuess, to over come depression and nervousness. These three lines of physical trouble are all closely allied. One good remedy will treat all of them successfully in most cases. PERUNA Js Indispensable It’s the one remedy that covers all of these various complaints, and it is the one remedy that has won a strongly entrenched position in the American home, as the result of forty-five years of successful ministration. Peruna is insurance. Its prompt use has beaten off many a cerious attack, and it has conquered catarrh of many years’ standing j In its liquid form it has well established itself, solely on its merits, and in the tablet form thousands rely upon it to give quick aid. Manalin is another indispensable. It is the ideal laxative and liver tonic. Ideal be- | Cause it is effective, mild and pleasant, and because it overcomes the difficulty without form- § ing a habit. Used rightly, it often is the Meow of restoring correct bowel action. In the 4 lui form it has been used almost as Jeng 94 eruna, and in the y Bos tablet form it is delightful to taste, convenient in administration, safe for Fike oy and children, and promptly effective. These medicines are standard in the homes of thousands. Merit has won success. PERUNA COMPANY, me g00d scare—Jefferson (0.) HI . - - . én | COMEDIES OF CAMP I LEWIS LIF B | And That Started Half a Doren! Fights 80 she escaped with bruises | STAR--SATURDAY, tit with Prot and t fat of pletures which Derman took Pleesed with the re end wanted Dorman to take them ever plainly in the plotures. very newsy these days fam Cutehon figures it's because not many pesteards are coming Ip, on account of the extra | cont stamp wer tax end wile Men Waiters came in frem Mog Corners. yesterday and voiced his praise as te the Sf the vadite equare fag pote, with It firet coat of paint. Me te come Dect tn the fall to ese oy t [PON Your BY BAS! M. MAN WASHINGTON, Jan [people are worrying because market quotations for Liberty bonds are ranging 2 or 3 points below par. Liberty Sie around 98%, while the 4 per cent bonds are quoted at about 97. For those unfamiliar with stock WORRY . interest, will bring $95.50 cash in the bond markets Some people, susceptible | whisperings of the German rumor mongers, are wondering whether this decline does not mean that they are | going a lot lower. This parlor pante ‘has been increased by stories about | people who have had to raise money quickly and were unable to get more | than §96.60 on short notice |. There is no basis for uch appre: | henasion ‘The only wonder ts that | the bonds have remain par, against the strong | of circumstances that have depress them. Consider the fact that during 1917 the price of all bonds declined to #uch an extent that gilt-edged bonds, which had a market value of $100 last January, ean now be purchased for $85. The basic cause in the in rease in prices, which has greatly ed the purchasing power of the value, as well aw the interest of the bonds. The Liberty #0 clowe to ondec yield bonds were issued in a falling bond | market, and cowd not escape its in | fluence. Moreover, when highrade | bonds, paying 5 or 6 per cent, are |nelling 10 points or more below par, |there is a great temptation for big investors to sell their Liberty bonds and pick up attractive bargains in corporate bonds On top of this great market force jthere have been a number of minor factors, There has been heavy pro ‘oying confidence tion's credit. in their na | the prychological effect of the Rus nian situation Every holder of Li aberty JAN, Ka Wicks, our genial postmaater, tan't | YOUR LIBERTY BONDS i | are now seiling| quotations, it should be said that this | means that a $100 Liberty bond of| “| the firet iasue, paying 3% per cent] to the! German selling for the purpose of | der We mhst also take into account| bonds | 19, 1918, PAGE 4 Ft Reindeer of North May Develop a Vast New Meat Supply for the U. S. | Alaska offers thin prospect of a | vant new food industry With natural grasing lands suf. ficient to support 20,000,000 of the animals, the Far North ean more than offset the growing shortage of beef in the United States, ‘The government will have to take the first step, however, by altering present restrictive laws #o that white settlers may have full rights to own, buy and import reindeer in large numbers, without relaxing the protection now afforded the Alaskan native and his herds. With general increase thus made possible, there seems no limit to the development of this new meat supply Start New Herds In anticipation of favorable con al action, a group of Nome recently purchased 4,000 leer from Lapp herders, and are making preparations to ship meat out in quantity, Others are planning | cattle ranges in the | © rapidly beng cut | up for cultivation, aggravating the beef shortage, the reindeer pastures | of Alaska are unfit for anything but grazing ‘The raising the reindeer as a bie industry would develop and util Yast areas of otherwine waste lands |in our northern territory | And it may prevent many a “meat |\oes day” after the war | “The animal was introduced into Alanka from Siberia in 1891 to fur nish food and livelihood for the na tives when game became soarce,” 6x | plained J. L. MePherson, head of the | Alaska bureau of the Seattle Cham- ber of Commerce A wmall drove of Alaska’s big reindeer herds, which may become as important as beef cattle in feeding the United States after the The reindeer lives in snow countries, eating lichens, moss, grass and willow sprouts, The meat has excellent flavor, resembling that of venison. “NOW I LAY ME DOWN TO SLEEP,” “SLIPPERY GULCH” TO SOLDIERS’ POPULAR PRAYER GIVE BIG WAR BAZAAR A reproduction of a frontier log |ging town of 50 years ago will be | eagteres tha poo Seeeer fartade the | DY RMY: CHARLES OTe \* “| the unique setting for the Masonle ulatore, the government forbade the é ‘an’ ten “abet ‘ : nale of female deer to whites i od rede Beryyiod YOU LEARNED IT, TOO, AT | |*ldiers’ war fund bazaar, to be Heérders brought from Lapland crs | MOTHER'S KNEE given by Angora grotto at the Ma the care of their! ge! sonic temple, Pine and Harvard, the “Now I lay me down to sleep. I pray the Lord my soul to keep. If I should die before 1 wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take.” | | Tlie train natives in | | stock were given « portion of the in) | crease, with the privilege of sale. In this way whi shave been enabled to buy « reindeer Define Grazing Zones “The government did a wonderful thing for the a tien providing for big see last three nights in January. “Slippery Guich,” as the town i named, will afford a varied in “Fun money” will be supplied, and all the old-time games will be in eve dence The ambulance stopped and the stretcher bearers carried a badly wounded Scotchman into the field| hospital. A surgeon bent over him, and then turned to Major Donald Guth- rie, a chaplain with the Canadian | * But what about their religious life? T “For Sale, Cheap—Complete fish y believe in a mythical re the Industry should carefully guard Volunteers, and sald They do not want much ad-| ing outfit, including two good setter present ri It should define| “Better talk to him. He won't| Vice as to what they should 40. dogs.”-Buffalo paper. |erasing sones for both whites and live more than ten minutes They say they know what to do—| Of interest to anglers who catch what they want is to get #OMe POW-| Puget sound dogfish. natives, and maintain strict rules #0 the that the native oannot sell out his herds and slip back into his former Let Major Guthrie finish story, as he told it to me approached the Scotchman and er so that they can do it. They do not like the preacher who is all the| time telling them to keep away from | BETTER THAN CALOMEL | misery: naked if there wan anything I) bad habits and bad surroundings. “Buch « plan would permit the oF could do for him. He promptly| They know all this. |dustry to grow to great commercial | aig po, | “Neither do they care to sing ‘On- mportance, and at the same time} et vou won't five very long”! ¥ ristian Soldier’ nor "The Son Thousands ds Have Discovered revent injustice to the Exkimo. © cctheteen | of God Goes Forth to War’ They Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets In the are following 1892! are sick of singing about war—al area nless Substitute the government imported 1,290 head. That doesn't matter.” came the! ino they are eager to fight. They This original herd has been increased | T¢ply. And then a smile crept into much prefer devotional music. Dr. Bdwarde Olive Tabletethe eal his eyes as he said: “I am not “Nor do they want to listen to for calomel—are a mild but afraid to die This ts the first) sermons about war. They want ad- ative cad their elect on the iver E decent thing I have done in thirty dresses which will lift them out of | instantaneous, They are there years.” | their surroundings and bring them |galt of Dr. Edwards’ determination, B. to 102,000 animals, They have be | come a life saver for the natives, fur. nishing them with a dependable method of transportation, meat, hides for clothing and a comfortable in come. “Shall I pray for yout’ I asked. | closer to God. liver and bowel “No, I can pray for myself,” re-|° “rhe soldier in thie war is learn-| plied the soldier. ing a lot about things that count. “Then suppose you do it” “And high tn the list of these ABOUT ) hn ny ia tw tate op, worth-while things are the cniatons] of mother. \ — Lerd my “Scores of men tn the trenches are | If 1 shold die before T wake"— being made over thru the memories And he was gone | of the things they learned at moth- ers knee. to understand that Uncle 8am! 1 have known quite intimately any event maintain the price| sooo soldiers, I have never known of the bonds, and while there may be/| on. who was afr to die. They | ‘emborary Suctuations, in the long) ai count it a great thing to give moe ‘ace skank eer prc thelr lives for thelr country. And i 90 per cent of the men whom I bonds. Sher are - right, and will) nave seen die and who prayed at remain all right as long on the atar | mn wpangied banner waves. Just co bre gin tr Ay COS Ee member that a bond is an invest 1h 4 7 - ment, that It Ix not intended to be! ome — a used instead of money, and that you can't expect to be able to nell it at a! moment's notice. TEL f i Fe se And i i he i [ i unlaR ut g a ! i & will t aco ts) bo REGISTERED DENTISTS will make no mistake if tule hes ae | ea Work at nieces Opera- ye TAD LD? TE “CHSGARETS” FOR BOWELS TONIGHT They're fine! Liven your liver| and bowels and clear your head. No headache, sour stomach, | bad cold or constipation by morning | othe ideal ‘, «© |yever age ‘with hot” Get a 10-cent box Colds—-whether in the head or |} any part of the body—are quickly overcome by urging the liver to a jtion and keeping the bowels f of poison, Take Cascarets tonight and you will wake up with a clear head and your cold will be gone | Cascarets work while you sleep These make up the usual h I stamach, remove the Mae, Wai Dutch lunch—but what | menien food ge gc take t Pd the excess bile fro ie r ill drink carty off the, constipated westa| wl you serve to | matter and poison from the bowels Remember the quickest way to} |get rid of colds is one or twb Cas carets at night to cleanse the sys-| tem. Get a 10-cent box at any drug! store, Don't forget the children They relish this Candy Cathartic| and it is often all that is needed to | drive a cold from their little sys. tems. ‘Rheumatic Ring Free To introduce, if you rend a stess have been asking themselves ‘ially whenever the occasion hap- little after-theatre or “inw there is a ready answer— For years the host and ho that same question — espec: s to be one of those coz: times” parties, Now, tween-times’ REG US PAT OFF. This distinctively new creation in soft drinks is sparkling— snappy—delicious, It is healthful w with the wholesomeness Of the choicest cereals—appetizing with the bouquet and agreeable bitter tang which only choice hops can impart. Ii is sure to “hit the spot”—sure to encounter no penlettnon, Bevo—the all-vear=) round soft drink | Pp of paper cut to Juat meet third finger LINCOLN, 47 Dean St. Attleboro, Mu | Guard Piteon hardier Rertearaia caret ty Cars BST ate Ladies’ and Men’s Tailor-Made Suits } A we Mixer | ‘You will find Bevo— in Seattle ! teurteed bottles, hermetically ANHEUSER-BUSCH, Sr. Louis } Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc. | RABY pnd jotnce, places: Dealers SEATTLE, WASH, | 425 Union St.

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