The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 18, 1918, Page 4

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Ae Ae iB a Boys’ Shepherd Check q| D. B. Spring Coats, sizes tut i $2.98 Special, each Ladies’ White, Lisle-finish Union Suits, extra size, 46, 48, 50; tight and loose knee; sleeveless; a round | neck and shoulder straps, trimmed with $1 00 | | e | washable ribbon. Special price, Suit.... Men's Union Flannet Shirts in plain tan, and green and gray stripes; medium weigitt; peart buttons in front and tops of each Same price as the manufac turer charges today Men’s Chambray Work Shirts in stripes and solid colors; cut full size; all Sites; each Boys’ and Girls’ Cotton Hose, | knit from ot combed cotton beet and toe, good quality yarn; spliced which insures Colors, black 25c Boys’ Wash Suits $1.49 Each ‘The belted models with the Bton or sailor collar. Made of madras, chambray, chevtots, Oxfords, ete., in plain and fancy pat ferns, Sires 2 to § years. nines, Ladies’ Lace Coflars— Something létneh jabot. Each Ladies’ Handkeechiets— Fine cambric, embrotd. - @red corners: special 10¢ yer, ee Girts’ Underpants, a clean-up of odds and ends in heavy-weight, fleece lined, carded and covered; regu: (f) these range from 45¢ to 9Se @ pair up, tomorrow, a pair.... H Boys’ Porews Kait bound; size € to 16 | Tn 65e\ | ish Hose; all colors, includ ing white and diack, 25¢ Black Bobdbinctte, 12 Inches wide, smal! mesh for waists, trimmings. ete; resular value 9c. ace .:,.... 20€ Cartain Fringe —A weil made, heavy fringe, suit able for trimming curtains, 19c spectal, yard Blue and white, special, yard “THe STORE TA | SAVES VOU MONEV OTMa i: SECONO AVENUE AT WAMES STREEY —E FLAG OF “U” |HERE’S MONTHLY JOB BEARS 1,104 STARS) THAT FACES RED CROSS hundred and four stars) At a meeting of all Red Cross aux : the University of Wash-| iiiaries at the Y. W. C. A. Wednes- undergradua' vice, it casses cine axturea ty the| 227 Mrs. M. 8. Bornstein outlined al clad, senior honor men's so-| to district chairmen the work which on the campus. The flag in| Seattle's Med Cross must accomplish displayed by any college| each month. im the states. [: was made by the) The quota which must be main a8 @ gift to the student body. | tained by Seattle women includes the) the same time an honor roll) following’ numbers of various gar the names of six students| ments: Three hundred and twe: two alumni who have “sone| convalescent robes, 900 pajamas service, was presented) 1,050 bed jackets, 2,000 bed sbirts,| the campus ¥. M. C. A.| 2,000 tape bed shirts, 950 bed socks.| the service flag. ten stars rep | 1,250 bandage foot socks, 250 under the army telephone service) ating sowns girls who left the university! shirts, 250 bgp eo passe vot thers Should Benefit Through His Experience’ Suffered for Nineteen Years With Stomach Trouble Be- | fore Finding Remedy j After suffering for nineteen years! with chronic stomach and kidne trouble, Mr. Chas. Froelich, R. F. D, No. 2, Gorham, Kansas, found a sim-| ple remedy that quickly relieved him. | He says: “I had tried all the doctors for miles around, but they did not| help me and I had about given up,| when my wife read in the K City Post about Fruitola and and what it had done for a stomach trouble. She Fruit#a and Traxo, and very firet I felt better. 1 ‘ As 4 two bottles and am well ¥ -_ 4 can eat and work like a y CHARLES FROELICH Fruitola and Traxo did it, and I'i!| do al! I can to get others to try it.” Fruitola and Traxo are compounded from the original Edsall formulas | ‘At the Pinus iaboratories in Monticello, 1il., ond can be purchased in drug! ‘Stores; a doctor's prescription is not necesstdy. Frultola is a pure fruit fi that acts as an intestinal jubricant, an? disintegrates the hardened that cause #0 much suffering, discharging the umulated to the sufferer’s intense relief. One dose is usually sufficient to its efficacy. Traxo is a tonic-alterative that is moat effective to Febuild and restore the weakened, rundown system. A booklet of special interest to those who suffer with stomach trouble ‘an be obtained by writing to the Pinus Laboratories, Monticello, Ill. | CLEMMER iY ansas Traxo man with sent for from the) 7 CLEMMER NOW PLAYING COMING SATURDAY C Marsh “The Face in the Dark’”’ A GRAY THRMAD. THE STORY OF A SOUL LAID BARE TO ALL THE WORLD— mental artist's model Ii ing in the Latin Qua of “Revelation” in dous picture Arama, a worthy vehicle for the genius of the great Nazimova. Read What the LITERARY of April 6tn Bays of “Revelation.” GUTERSON'’S AUGMESTED RUSSIAN ORCHESTHA “Oberon” By Weber Plerne —~A BIT OF ASH FROM A CIGAR —on these two clues hangs the fate of the one she loves most in all the world— then comer the biggont test of her life—the dis- covery grips her heart and fille her brain with fener. land hope -|amoke French tobacco. IT'S TOUGH TO BE WITHOUT A SINGLE SMOKE Sometimes when the packages of sent by Our Roya in France |Tobacco Fund arrive in France there in not enough to go all the way around, Ameriean tobacco cannot be bought over there even when the |noldiers have the money. ie pretty tough to be one of are left out in the din but It those who tribution » has to be short packages fre conta that you give k mo ' TOBACCO FUND BENEFITS Children’s dancing exhibition at the Douglas dancing academy, $15 Kast Pine at Vriday night at 8 o'clock Mxhibitien drill and dance given by the uniform rank of the A. 0. U. W., Columbta lodge No. 2, at the K. of P. hall, First ave nd Pike #t, on Friday night | | ” man in the army from being without his package, and feeling that he has been forgotten A letter from Private Thornton, motor driver, and one from Private Kane of the Infantry tell the story | Of pleasure received Somewhere in France, Dear Friends» cheer came to me. enough for it, I had smoked my last clgaret when I got up, and did not know where or when the next was coming, ax the mall was some Your package of and I can’t say | what tied up, it being so heavy and lnomeone had to be short of packages dor was a contraband shipment ne. It did not ou coult not have price, You can say it ix a wondertul work it goes on, as tobacco tx Very nearce and you just can't get from home, I wa coat much but boughs it for for me tha lit at times, and it makes the hours [pass quicker, when we amoke and ! n of home. LEE BE. THORNTON, No. 509, Couvols Automo- M., A. BE. l, France dream aaw bilew, Par B.C Here Is Another Letter Teday, every member of our com pany received a package of amokens from you and | wish fo express my ppreciation of same. When we ar ived in this town we hadn't been paid for some time and most of ux were out of smokes, Helieve me, it was pretty tough for awhile, While reading an old Boston Post of Nov. 10, the other day, I read a lece about some woman in Phila dolphin who didn’t Approve of send ing smokes to the boys over here. Well, | wish she would tell me what A do if Hdn't amoke. (sit and kn * of something suppone.) Wefore the ¥. M. C. A was established here we had to If you have ever amoked any you will know how bad off we were. All that French to- bacco is is dried wood. Thanking you again for the smokes, | am Yours truly, PRIV, F. G. KANE, M. G, Co., 104 Regt. U. &. Int, American Epeditionary Force. Tonacco FUND H. Pitkin Mrs. Anne Miss Wabe! Nw. Vester, 1118 ttod ave &. W. ot. Chas. Johnsen, Pert Townsend Mrs. Belle Phiibrick, Port Townsend Clip Out This Cou- pon; Help Sammies To THE Fprrorn ‘The Seattle Star: Inclosed find Port Madison Gitterd, 1 Johansen, 9364 Fifth ave. . te bey packages of tetacce. thre “Oar Reyes in Vrance Tobacco Fund” for American fighting men in France. T enderstand that each dollar bays packages, each with @ retail valee cents, and that In coch of my me, on whieh . to send me a menage of thashes Nome Addrese DIVISION NO. 10 CALLS QUOTA Men selected from division No. 10 to go to Camp Lewis with the second contingent under the second draft, on April 26, were announced as fol lows Charles Pete Bend N. Armatre Andres J Hawkins, George John McKinnon, Fred Stavoin T. Dethoglow, ota Peterson, George P. Crain eidie, Elwood Porter, Neil Camp- bell, Resolva Greene, Louis K. Livit- aky, Peter Endress, William Kipper, David B. Wyard, Detetrios G. Kar. tunas, Gabriele Colasurdo, William G, Butler, Harvard Nordmark. Tripone Scattagtia, Carl R. Lad- Frank J. Fulton, Fred Neil, W. Perovich, Rudolph C, Rernard H. Primmer, Angel- tomonico, Arthur L. Raynor, Roy Drake, Lee R. J. Cayze, Dominco Simone, Merlin C. Davia, Peter Hel neth, Erick 1, Erickson, Eugenice Roncoll, August 8 . Angel Evanoff, Clarence Ralph De Marco, John Makovic, Jas. M Rothachild, Solomon Kekemazi John de Nardo, Joseph Gallagher o Olson, William MelInnes, Andrew ©, Storaik, Garrel M der. William WH. Bi Stewart HH. Hunter, Egido Fantanzzi, Sverre Fostvedtk, William Silva, Olaf J. An- son, Alfred Pederson, Chester ‘enson, Dominick Chiocchia, Fred J. Carter, James Coslett, Guiseppe Filocomo, Joe Donorshi, Richard V. Kallnan, Denison Jerusalmi, Chris tian Goodmanson, Joseph Beneviate, Tony Chiselg, Ole Hau Andrew Blixt, George L. Christensen, Anton C. Lang, Carl Larson, William R. ied monsond, FB. Kallantses, Ratache Peeff, George Le Grande. Alter I. Erickson, George A, Adama, Phil- Ip A, Joseph, Louis Rasmussen, Frank J. O'Leary, John Spaulding Mike Napnle, John Enlund, James Monroe, Niek Lucteh Haber ‘orn, Tain Kochioft, Mike Kosoft, ‘Timboldt Gobaeff, Ernest A. Hahn, George A, Jackson, W. L. Robb, Alex Ogott and Lester ‘Wintermute, 0 Lueben otinie Pierre, Pp rence as Private Thornton | Scaltal, | Frank Boyk, Walter | John | tterson, | Kin- | 1 tes—Pasquale Perri, Henry SR Mahe Ai IS tn MN AOC RIM 8 RIAN wp I STAR—THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1918. PAGE 4 Far and Near News by Telegraph and Telephone | Bae Thomas J. elskjen was denied n Verdict for damages against the Wing cafeteria by a Jury in Superior Judge Dykeman's court on Wedr j day . "The of dincunne Executive Branch | State Government’ will b lat the Y. M. C. A. naturalization Jolase Thursday night | Funeral services for Mrs, dames 1, uraday afternoon wbytertan chureh were held this af from the chapel of 1. 1, for William Il. Dav ntate | Clark were held | " ternoor ” @onn, Kirk of th | ‘Tuomday at.the i H. Davin, Kirkland | Hishop Prederie W. Keator will jepoak at & mann meeting to be held the Labor Temple Annex Friday ‘nthe ne WII to Win the War | Auxiliary on] »v un ler the ausploes of Jisth Engineers | Wednesday the American Savings Yank & Trust Company of Seattle 1 juder totaling $70,000 againet the Illinois Truw Chicago The judem leranted on default by a jury in Su | perior Judge Hoyd Tallman's depart ment. | dudge Gilliam granted a motlon for nonesult Wednesday in the case of \w V. Champnoys aguinat T. L. Ir win, Champneys sued to recover $41,000 da #, of which he alleged he had been defrauded in a real es tate transfer. | Sheriff Jutius Van Gerste, with 10 [barrels of whinky, arrived in Seattle Thursday from Skykomish. The snd war selzed by the sheriff while en route | Mrs. Ada Higginbotham, her hus band and two children have returned to Canada. Charges of perjury red by Prosecutor Lundin against irs, Higginbotham on the complaint er husband, were disminsed Wed. Higginbotham is a returned uutian soldier. | Funeral services were held Wed. nenday afternoon for Mrs. K. Haley Hankins, who died Monday after | noon the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs John Haley eurvived by her husband, Maj. Alvin H. Mankinw; @ sister, Mre Eaunet C Brown, and three children—John Haley Hankins, Alvin H. Hankine,! de, and Katherine Hankins Mrs. J. A. Edwards, « nurse, was held up by @ footpad at N. 74th at land Aurora ave, Wednesday night at 11, and robbed of $4.65 and a watch Mrs. Edwards lives at Diller hotel i SAN FRANCISCO. —Pleading gull ty to a charee of ships rounds ef ammonit from this river points, © A. Paulson was , od by United States District Judge Maurice T. Dooling and will be ser tenced Thursday. Capt. Paulson's brother, Robert. wan recently sus pended as deputy inspector of hulls | and boilers in Seattie. a ES 'Wash Away| Skin Sores | DDD Hqwid wash, hat become oday ie the master wreparstion fo > Giessen, Try PDD. today euarantos |), Me Mte and 8) 06. D.D.D. BARTELI’S DRUG sTORR TOMORROW THE ORDEALS A Powerful Drama. Today Is Your Last Chance to See MAY ROBSON A NIGHT OUT cos Include War Tax | Its 10¢ — Children Se lather, She in 5 This Week Only--A Free Tube This Offer on sodent Ends Saturday Night Present Coupon Today See How Teeth Glisten When that Film is Gone AU Statements Approved by High Dental Authorities Old Methods Fail To Save Teeth | As Everybody Knows Soap and a have for euaieate of years been the basis of tooth pastes powders. Most cleanly people use them daily. Yet statistics show that decay and pyorrhea have constantly increased. Those methods have failed. Teeth still dis- color, still decay, despite the daily brushing. Tartar still accumulates. in some degree, is almost universal. Every little while one must visit a dentist for a vigorous dental cleaning. Now it is known that the trouble lies in a clinging film. In that slimy film which you feel with your tongue. That is what discolors. It hardens into tartar. It holds food particles which ferment and form acid. It holds that acid in contact with the teetn—the cause of all decay. That film is albuminous, so it forms an ideal breeding place for germs. Millions of germs of all sorts are ever-present in it. These germs, together with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Through the in- flamed gums the germs enter the veins. Now it is known that many serious diseases are due to this mouth infection. Thus most tooth troubles, and the troubles they lead to, are caused by this film on teeth. You cannot avert therm by brushing teeth by any old-time method. That film resists the tooth brush. It into crevices and stays. With any soapy den‘ the alkali in it help to make the film more resistant to the brush. But science now has supplied a way to combat that film. The way is called Pepsodent—a dainty film digestant. this offer is made to let a one- week test show you its effects. For the sake of clean, safe, glistening teeth, we urge you to accept it. Pepsadéen: Present Free-Tube Coupon to OPEN-AIR SCHOOLS ARE URGED FOR SEATTLE ‘« Open air adoption Alkali Makes Soap ‘ Bad Most son poos contain too much alkali, is very injurious, as it dries the sealp and makes the hair brittle. The best mulsified ¢ pure and entirely very cheap, pens! to ple lrug store, last the whole family for months, moisten water and rub it in, spoonful ts all that is required, makes an abundance of rich, creamy cleanses Simply rinses out quickly and ev DLON [ati BEL ined Bi] Na ment br to ha takes t dirt and dandruff,—Advertise- REGUS The New-Day Dentifrice Jwhen former Health Commissioner | Dr. J. EB | Crichton appeared before | vard of education at their re He presented “A a leaflet insued by the| les of King neeting | schools for Seattle, ‘Their Wednesday for Justice was urged Anti-Tuberculosis } count Following the same lines, Dr. Ira! Rrown, Seattle medical director for the school district, submitted a recommendation for the adoption in sll city schools of windows hinged! sham-| at the top. for Washing Hair ps and prepared which | | SAYS OUR BUSINESS IS TO KILL HUNS | Gen. Swinton, speaking at a lunch eon tendered by the British-Amert axaociation Wednesda: Marche, said the pnd to the war, and that destruction of Germany, Our busi- ness, he said, is to kill as many Huns as possible thing to use ia just plain ocoanut oil, for this is greascless It's , and beats the most ex aps or anything all You can get this at any! and a few ounces wilt the hair with about a tea It PAY BONUS FOR NAMES | For every name reported in the school census, which begins May 1, |the enumerator will be paid at the te of 2% cents, in addition to 25 nts an hour, Secretary Reuben Jones, director of the census, esti-| ates the numbar of enumerat thoroughly, and easily, The hair dries nly, and is soft, fresh fluff Besides, particle ight, ndle out ot | Red Cross chairman, This New Method Ends the Film Prove It by a 7-Day Test Pepe teat on rere. the digest- ant of albumin. The object is to digest and dissolve this clinging, albuminous film. Then to every day combat it, so the teeth are ever free. Pepsin must be activated, else it is inert. The usual activating agent — hydrochloric acid—is harmul to the teeth. So pepsin, for this purpose, long seemed barred. , But invection has now supplied a harm- less means of activating it. In Pepsodent this agent is combined with pepsin. And five gov- ernments have already granted patents on the combination. So activated in can now be applied to this film. And it means the end of that film, as experience with Pepsodent proves. For three years this product has been sub- jected to thousands of clinical tests. Many able authorities have watched the results. Those tests have proved that Pepsodent solves the problem of that film. And it does that in a dainty, pleasant way. Now we offer a One-Week tube so that anyone can prove it. Present this coupon for it. Use it like any tooth paste, then note bow different are the Pepsodent results. Note how clean your teeth feel after using. Note how they whiten as the film coat di$appears. You will know in one week that filmless teeth are ible. The teeth’s chief enemy can be defeated. results of film can be prevented. Then you will always use Pepsodent. Nothi: could induce you to return to old methods. You have an entirely new conception of clean teeth. Cut out the coupon now. ONE-WEEK TUBE FREE Present this coupon, with your name and address filled in, te the druggist named. It is good for a One-Week Tube of Pepsodent. Out-of-town residents should mail this compon te The Pepsedent Company, 1104 So. Wabash Avenue, Chicage, and the tube will be sent by mail. ‘The Seattle Star, Seattle, Wash. HONOR GUARD GIRLS SELL BALL TICKETS Ticket sale for the poster ball which will be held 4 at! will be in the hands of! the Seattle Girls’ Honor Guard der the direction of Miss Katherine Kittinger, A canvaas of off ings will made this w thousand tickets will be available. = TRON increases strength of delicate, nervous, run-down people In two weeks’ time in many instances Used and highly indorsed by for- mer United es Senators and Members of ( ess, well-known physicians a former Public Health officials. Ask your doc- tor or druggist about it war ~ the Arena. un ROME.—®. P. Davison, American left Wednes- DocTor's Rxamination and Consultation FREE at the MECHANICS’ DRUG STORE 906 Third Ave ‘The doctor will be giad to talk over your trouble with you and prescribe for you, if Only charges will be for medicines prescribed or treatment taken, You will be surprised how lttla it will cost you. day for Plorence, EPILEPTIC ATTACKS Weblo TRAST AERE 3 or our valuable beok

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