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———— —<——_—_—| THE SEATTLE STAR|AMERI 1R0T Sevemth Ave, New . m SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NrWsrarmns)| LYON w RY ©, ¢ Reporter | : Aveay in | IN THE AMERICAN TRENCHES -|}IN FRANCK, April new philosophy of death Americ in France to its an * United Press Association - = Star Second-Class Matter months, $1.1; @ months, $2.10; Mail, out of city ity, 206 a month 49 per month; & By car ¢ in the It's hard intangible define, but something the mindg of our fighting men, ‘They no longer fear death, [t's only ver that TL myself caught the thing would call it fataliam average soldier expron I'm not dead yet and { won't until my time comes Whatever it in, it kills worry Since our boys bave quit worry ing so much about their prospects of getting killed they have more time and energy for fighting and y the game more,” maid a high but the thus e It Safe for Mankind és German newspapers are warning that another war Winter is in prospect, says a cablegram. That's German. it to be American. low is the very time for the American people to con- such a prospect. War may cease before next winter, Dut so long as there is the slightest chance that it will not, Wt is America’s positive duty to prepare, with all her might,/. another winter of war. It is not only duty to humanity] their d as a matter of “safety.first,” but it is a matter of good) »!ete!y ness. For any surplus that peace might find on our) there'll be markets and high prices. For at least a)» after war ceases, we'll have to feed the greater part of . They're killing or otherwise incapacitating the t producers by the thousands daily, in Europe, and we've) to. supply what they might have produced. But, dash! iness reasons! We ought to fully prepare for another, inter of war for those other reasons—humaneness and ln te first. 5 My nerves one And these are ways in which to do it: Guess :Tim a neturel be Put in all the war gardens possible. Preserve eggs. Bieriiinatinnin Preserve butter. {| Can, dry or “preserve” every sort of food that will keep. | ental change that had come over hin troops Our boys did not quit about death UNT >} ALLY GOT IN TH In their training camps, many miles back of th ront the tren attitude has changed com ye M8 The case of I urope nie was in the guard ¢ misconduct; and when I aske why he didn’t behave maid completely coward GRAD | Pershing's There's a) that has taken hold of} | ral who was commenting on the/ STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1918. PAGE 6 CANS ON FIGHTING FRONT UALLY BECOME FATALISTS ! 1 Have a Rendezvous With Death BY ALAN SI inp When spring co And bar re me ft At some apple | have ar us w When spring brings ba into shall pas ) some Roarred » When spring comes ro: And the first meadow od knows ‘twere Pillowed in sitk and Where love throbs ¢ “ulee nigh to pulee Where hu I have a rendezvous w nidnight in some spring trips fort I my not fail that Poems” by Alan pledged ying either to get kicked rmy or to be went te regiment: w ted for r fire « medal for In warm weather particularly, substitute for meat and! »— wholly, fruits, fish and vegetables while they're} tt in your order for fuel now. Consume little of those things that come to you by long rail or water. f Fail to do these things and another winter of war will the most horrible period in human history. America innot afford to take the risk. It is upon America that the of civilization finally depends. What has become of the old fashioned woman who to cook things ina paper bag? And what has be- of the o. f. girl who held both feet on the floor she sat in a street car—and didn’t show one of knees? 2 Suffrage Amendment The visit of Miss Margaret Whittemore, national suf- leader, brings home to Seattleites the fact that there till some sections of the United States so immersed in ideas that the women are not yet in possession of the Here in the free West, we can hardly realize that men nt intelligence would place a sex qualification on to vote, rather than one of intelligence and under- The veriest ignoramus and the drunkard of the may vote in some parts of the United States, while) nost highly intelligent and educated woman may not. __ It is to arouse us to an understanding of the unfair con- ons that still obtain, and of the need for the passage of | B federal suffrage amendment in the senate, that Miss) hittemore is here. us give her all the aid possible. We can help by to our own senators, Miles Poindexter and Wesley . Jones, to stir them to more enthusiastic endeavor in this ~ The women of the United States are entitled to the bal- t fully as much as the men. To deny them this is to be- our gwn great cause in the world struggle, namely, cy. British Dyes Co., which got the German recipes, is g the biggest dividends the government will per- Evidently the German dye monopoly is a wreck. Von Capelle says this is going to be a long > is—if the German navy has its way about it. Anyhow, with a few more British raids like that Zeebrugge and Ostend, and the Germans will need _ some ports in Holland. WHY SUFFER A Chicago woman threw AA shoe from a hotel window that struck a man on the head who didn't raixe his hat when the An ade id fashioned Y ne carryin oi | With steam trai a ‘of the traction company's » customers, and the courts ¢ . | that franchise agreements should lrespected, the street car offi 3 © | must be losing faith in humanity Pgs ge {the blood takes on new life and the skin is more active Hs and can better assist in the Summer as in Winter \elimination of the poisons External applications may sometimes relieve the pain] While the damp, cold, temporarily, but they cannot] changeable weather of Winter have any effect on the dis-| intensifies the pains and ease. The blood must be Other disagreeable symptoms treated before a cure can be of Rheumatism, it is by no\ effected. » Means a winter disease exclu-. §. § S., a remedy made sively. Through the long from roots, herbs and barks, Months of Summer its wan- js the best treatment for dering pains and twitching Rheumatism. It attacks the Nerves are felt by those who disease at its head, and by} are afflicted with this d neutralizing the acid, driving] room walls again, just like they were Rheumatism is a dise t out, and building up the really there Why docan't the ¥. W that involves the entire blood so it can supply nour-|©. A. furnish two pairs. of nice, col . Its primary cause re-|ishment and strength to every|P*bile honey, walls, well papered? sults from the failure of the part of the body, it drives| ‘ eliminative organs, the Liver,|out Rheumatism permanent-| Wi HOLD Kidneys and Bowels, to carry|ly. Being purely vegetable,| Te decide a bet » out of the system acids and|it will not injure the system,|¥"t !* the color of the refuse matter. as do medicines which contain| "\\\"., Not only is Rheumatism the Potash or some other mineral! Most painful of all diseases, ingredient. S. S. S. tones up| What is the with its swollen, stiff joints, every part of the body by its! @nslieh lencu throbbing muscles and sting- fine tonic properties. While| 7° '*'’" ' ing nerves, but it is a formid-| cleansing the blood of all poi-| How tong able and dangerous trouble. sons it builds up the appetite) berry hortenke?-—-Annle Cook If its cause is allowed to re- and digestion and completely| 4% long a» you can get main in the blood, and the|relieves Rheumatism. If you|"*~t!! toward the end of Jul; becomes chronic, are worried with the nagging! pi chalky deposits form at the pains of Rheumatism, do not my ints, and they are rendered| wait for it to become chronic, ) Poster immovable and stiff, and the but begin the use of S, 8, S.| Te 't to 4 hair store tient left a helpless cripple. today and purge the blood of; women ery day the poison remains particle of the poison.|an + in the system the disease gets for our book on Rheu-| Ther a firmer hold. The best time| matism and any medical ad-|% " to get rid of Rheumatism is in| vice. Address 410 Swift Lab- warm weather; because then| oratory, Atlanta, Ga, HABIT | “Why the noise | ; arbe B why the He have a shampoo.”"—Record, ee e) as Common in ix shaving himself.” argument? Life on the Ocean Wave She used to sit upon his lap As happy as could be But now it mikes her sea-sick He has water on the knee Pitt Panther . the ee And now far-away Fr want omes rumor from ance that the boys don't more “giggly girls” work in the canteens. They want niece, motherly m rs who can make them see th ur old sitting ar NTS please wind busiest Lou Moore. It is always in use. se tell me how I can tell if irl's hair is her own,—Bill needed for ¢ ng “The restaura t keeper who ‘threw < trying to persuade himself | COMEDIES OF CAMP LEWIS LIFE a No. 4) England dinner has company to | in I don’t mind camouflagin’ this thing, but I'll be switched if I carry it over to the range. * powt cards L. W I ordered an Irish stew in 8. | What Is Liberty Without a Band? letter in the should I make straw- | ly strawber- | | i) to be allowed to buy) signed like th }of being lower sugar used when most) sha¢ in’ 4 potato when you ordered a New! the window, The Liberty band has decided to disband. ‘This is very discouraging to many of the Liberty people, Lib: erty will be without a band.—Ver. sailles (111) Sentinel, isa A WORD FROM JOSH WISE: Oppertunity gen'rally knocks soft but misforehun rings th’ doorbell good an’ hard What has become of the old-fash ed man who used to say, “What np has to come down? An Akron Inventor haa perfected a rubber window shade is shade in only two feet long and is not de. old shader Instead ws the ordinary is, M in stretched until it reaches the window sill, to which it an be hooked, When unhooked it snaps back into place at the top of , me of by nwakenings a a restaurant and they ‘threw | oun with De rieade and w 1 ou ith Dea k bh “ke om 1 quer ith und flowers appear ul sleep, n to breath dear th De flaming town again thi am true rendesvou Heeger. word attempt t they nt te Editor's Mail |. ANOTHER KAISERIZED — | LANDLORD " — tell y t landlord | Star: T wirh to trageous robbery my is performing I Nive 1 Beneca, in an apartment house in back of the ¥ W.C. A. My landiord charges me $59 « month for a cold, dirty apa Ment, the walla of which have long since shed a good portion of thelr coat of plaster. And, what's he said that he w to a with them until t even told the 4 1 Fifth ar urchased a bond, too, but if J. 1. L. Landiord raises the rent, I will be forced to drop It i hardly think Mayor Hanson will stand idly by and watch rage thrust upon the p te. A FATHER CORD WOOD TOO HIGH Editor The Star: Why is it that we, living in a timber country, must | pay such high prices for cord wood? 2 rd, 0 Ko to our | |informe us to the prices wet by tion.” TWO FOR YOUR ALBUM Mr. Manning Langley, with bh two twin boys, Blumus and Lumus. spent Su deville with rel- | jatives—Camp Hill (Ala) News |RECIPE TO DARKEN GRAY HAIR | A Cincinnati Barber Tells How to | Make # Remedy for Gray Hair | san | | | | Mr. Frank Harbaugh, of Cincin | nati, O. who has been a barber fer more than fort? years, recently made | the following state “Any mixture at home, at that will darken gra ft soft and glos«y water amall box of Barho ¢ ounce gly q ent one can Pp are a simple le cost, dd make pint of rum, a “ompound and % | ingredients | can be bougt y drug store at very little Ar to the hair twice a week until the desired shade | is obtained. This will make a gray [haired person look twenty years lyounger. It does color the] scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not vub off.” | add one ounce bay erine cost not If You Need The services of a DENTIST, bear in mind that the Albany | | Dentists are Dentists of long {experience and recognized skill and ability. | Our high class work, low prices and painless methods are vouched for by over twenty thousand satisfied! patients. All Work Guaranteed for 15 Years Come in today for FREE} Examination and Consulta-} THE ALBANY DENTISTS Peoples Savings Bank . Ave. oe Pike tie | wet a wcratel | place when I was in it, but the other Bennie took the Ue later a lew und maid ‘Captain, I'm go! against one of your back there ing right thru that barrage lod him to wait until it all he ¥ A it nant came up to me «to file I met him wan ber charges mer and he ton go 1 com wok maid wa You go THE WIDOW M’KATT, BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE 1 comfort,” said Whe, with her eyes growing dim, . widow to lowe such a husband ae bim this town, and I say it with pride, Nage the day tpat he died n out of the county, he said, 1 mind went right nie, a few days | © of his outfit your own busine The first niv trenches I feet born in wa he expla % ner out of bis head So the had the town marshal to head the parade, ‘ And the constable spok nd the band played and played You,” added the Widow MeKatt with a sigh, “It ‘most was as good as the Fourth of July.” in were In r ther fellow was killed thru t I didn How car J explain that? I told m I haven't wince.” welt | wouldn't and worrled about death “He was eany to manage. He'd sit for a year A-watchin’ me work and not once interfere, And when work was gearce and not easy to find He'd seldom reproach me, his heart was that kind And well I remember him tellin’ the court divoree for the lack of support, wo well he'd leave me alone face the cold world with no face but me own. how could I help,” said the Widow McKatt, To cherish and work for a husband like that? Every the hour of the da soldier han imprensed sethat it's unelens to worry. A com pany was coming out of the trench | %en the other morn man, tho,worn and py in theAnought ot quiet with shaves and baths and good things to eat and recreation big jovial sergeant sang out v good bye trenches, that slmont him " When Their Time Comes They Die “ He would ask n er he love ing and ever nleepy, was Gaye He wan such a deep student of men and affairs! lied «it with hia feet in two splint-bottomed ebairs, A-readin’ the almanac till he could quote it And all of its symptoms, as if he had wrote it And tho @readful good-humored, he used to get mad if THE CLARION dropped out a liniment ad Ner it isn't a boast, for it's true as you've heard, Fovery barn in the township he knew word for word! ‘o there's nobody Jeft,”” said the widow, “I'm sure, Whe had such a passion for liter-a-choor, is over for awhile. Boys, we'll »e weeing the Statue of Liberty Just at that instant a shell ex 1a fleece of shrapnel mtruck ant in the head and killed If only he'd lived till the fifth of next May, He'd have been sixty-five, seven months and a day, Hut for half of his life he had seldom been sober, And so Ke expired on the tenth of October, And just as he left on the pathway to heaven, Says he, ‘Molly, dear, I'm but seventy-seven, Hut if I'd abjured the Great Tempter,’ said he, Long years before this I'd have been eighty-three* It's « mighty great comfort,” ed Widow McKatt, “For a woman to bury a husband Mke that.” (Copyright, 1918, by N. E. A) ked an if the sergeant’s time had come to die see An artiller Neutenant whone ttery had been under almost con stant shelling for days and who had lost several of his men, fell from his horse and died from a fractured skull the first day he got back to rest camp. eee x Shells Miss Him — Fall Kills Him State Campaign Against Glaring Lights Held Off Deputy Secretary of State F. B. Williams announced today that state officials wilt give autoists a few days more to test their lights, and then | open a campaign against glaring headlights | A tenting station is being conduct: | ed by Williams at the Standard gar-| jage, 2126 Third ave. where lights} are tested without charge. X drivers think they are safe * they have certain patent mays Williams, but the ttached as the lenses is no insurance, | xestructors, They | Unless the lights are on the car} have spread a/Properly. It’s easy to deter-nine at! cheerful philoso esting station.” | phy among our Ktroops, One of them, im a little speech to American troopea the other day, put the “don't worry” proposition this way: “Why worry? If a shell or a bullet comes over, two things might happen: you might get hit and you mightnot get hit. If it doesn’t hit! you have absolutely nothing to Ty out. If Ht kills you you; ause for worry, in fact, ry. If it we vu, wt of the ¢ g time. Therefore. Personally foarn of getting } * T also led have lost my My regular gedillet ix in a par. demolished His Fear of stone house, Heing Hit | just buck of the aw Kline and bun dreds of shells pass over it every Gay Nothing Lyon Loses tially old ever happened to the day, when I was some miles away & pleee of shell came thru the roof, jeaving a hole as big as a washtub. Why didn’t that shell call when I vas at home WE WOULD SAY: * Why Fret? Put your money in Liberty Bonds—the saf- est security in the world —and you help to the war. Conservatism yet pro- Order Your SUIT NOW| fh ey tas we Before Woolens sa Advance Again phy for a sol n thi Bush & Lane. Everything in Music OR many years the Bush & Lane Piano Company has been the most successful piano concern in the state, and its great growth, as ‘shown by our large factory and stores in half a dozen cities, is due solely to its ability to give you finer instruments and better values than you can get anywhere else. ND when you buy at Bush & Lane’s you know that you are safe. Every Bush & Lane instrument can be depended upon to be truthfully repre- sented, absolutely reliable and a fine value at its price. Everything purchased at Bush & Lane's, from the largest grand piano down to the least expensive music roll or phonograph record, is unconditionally guaranteed and if defective will be gladly replaced. Fuhelane Pam A One-Price-to-all-House Manufacturers Seattle Store 1519 THIRD AVENUE Between Pike and Pine