The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 22, 1918, Page 3

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STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1918. CONFESSIONS |22AREDEAD. PAGE 8 [gmat Cynthia Grey’s if} Satisfactory Terms Always shown until F night—no longer! || always does come as Y FOUR YEAR | IN Auta) GREATER COLISEUM SYMPHONIC ORCHESTRA—24 PIECES MATINEES 25¢—EVENINGS tui SEM 'ALLIED SHIPPING LOSS SHOWS BIG DECREASE WASHI ON, May 22.—Pigures of British and allied shipping losses for April show a decrease of 25 per |eent from the previous monthly av lerage, Acting Secretary Hoo: t |aaid today. He ascribes the reduc tion in sinkings to the increased ac tivity of the allied fleets, saying that | the raids on Ostend and Zeebrugge | undoubtedly will have an effect on ‘laa May shipping losses, NION ‘STUDY OF GERMAN | IS KILLED IN CALIFORNIA|- SACRAMENTO, May 22 The study of German in the high schools of California was knocked out y terday when the state board of edu cation unanimously adopted lution calling for the elimination of the study of the language from the high school courses. Schools refusing to comply with the ordér of the board will be cut off from receiving an apportionment of the state high school fund QUART ATIONAL DENTISTS: THIRD & PIKE | SAVE Good Dentistry lala at YOUR] maa EYE Scientific Examination Twenty-five Years’ Experience Fitting and M. Ten Years in Seattle. Reliable and Dependable We will fit reading spherical in gold-filled frame —— A reno: ‘This ia an illuet ognized Make of quarters. OF A WIFE MAN'S THOUGHTS ON ARRIAGE a r little been look ing back over your What Hut ding made y memory, I wanted again to see what | really thought of it all Little book, I have pages today a long time ago It seems: Dick's day reference to our book, I read in fact, I spent mo the day in looking over the volumes in which 1 have written down not only my con feasions, but the annals of my fam ily and friends And now it is all over. Now that rt of my life is finished. 1 almont Ifeet that in a very little while all | that ts interesting in my life will be and you, little book |not be interested in my « life, Hut 1 must k for a little while about Dick and Dick's baby, for this manuseript Dick has left me shows that he, too, had very distinct ideas of married life when he stopped to think Wasn't it dear of him to think of telling me of all this It he not written It to me I would er have known that per | hapa hg thought a» much about mar | riage ab I did, and I don’t mind con | foaming to you that some of Dick's | manuscript is not very flattering to | me. long way will ryday p on telling you over, | Dear Dick, he and that in splendid | thing of thin kind can have only or | merit, and that Ia absolute and hon leat sincerity, not only of mind, of purpose has been honest, him, | In his manuseript, Dick says: “Do you know, Margie, when I had my firwt disappointment in you? Don't shudder, dearest; I was per. haps more to blame than you, but I |wonder if every man has a rude awakening after marriage, and if it arly as mine did, “You that remember, dearest, | beautiful ride right before our wed-| ding. You were so sweet. I think I [have told you it was the passionate pex of my selfish happiness, You | wanted ‘to belong. you told me. |Poor child, you did not know what you were saying, but I, in my arro Rance an & conquering and ponwens ling male, believed you “Then came that morning on the sleeping car when I compared you with all the other women in the cold la@ray morning after a more or lem leepleas night in a berth I saw }that you were like a great big baby in your fresh beauty beside the worn and wrinkled women who followed to the dreasing room. t was perhaps providential that there were no other brides in the lear, Margie, and that I could only compare you with the much older women who were traveling at that ume. “L did not stop to think that you land I would grow old. I only knew }that my wife was the prettiest wom an to be seen In the car, and was proportionately happy “L was superstitious enough to be eve you brought me luck in Buf falo, when I got that school contract with so little tre and, wife o mine, you were perfectly adorable that day at the Falla when we for got everything except this wonder ful, wonderful world, and that we were alive to enjoy it “Too bad, inn't it, Margie, that #0 many times since then we both for | mot that the world was wonderful? | Too bad that now when I nm only nee that the path of life ends in a mist that covers up everything be yond, I realize ita wonders more than Too bad that we cannot al understand what ts so oft ‘Time is fleeting,’ until it has fled. Sometimes I think mat it is only at the door of eternity that we realize the time we have wasted in pursuit of non-exsential things “1 atill remember how you. looked that morning at the Falls ax you sat close and trembling beside me as we | went down the Gorge. I do not be I ever after had that een of poaseanion that I had then.” (To Be Continued) "AILMENTS OF WOMEN There in no denying the fact that thousands of American women drag along day in and day out suffering with these ailments peculiar to their sex which make life a burden. If women wh suffer from dragging down pains, inflammatory, ulcerated or catarrhal conditions would only give that greatest of all remedies, Lydia EF. Pinkham's Vegetal Com pound, a trial, they would rs find relief from such ®ufferin y letters of commendation con being published prove ble. wa: on our lips ition of the Rest Value ever offered in a Rec king Machine, shown at Phonograph Head $1.50 a Week Buys This Splendid Instrument Bring the Music of America into your home. triotism, and in addition to its wonderful every member of your family the kind of to. This Fine Cabinet Grafonola, equipped features THIS SPECIAL OUTFIT—Consisting of th is offered in with ten selections (five double and 1,000 Needles, all for $70.8 80—on SPECIAL TERMS OF ME TO THE and see the di STORE » in this mode faced 750 ¥ and hear your favorite it will inepire greater pa- educational value, it will give entertainment they with all the exclusive Columbia ‘© entitled 6 Columbia Grafonola, as shown cords), one Record Cleaner $1.50 a Week fferent woods and finishes now music played—and played wed me wish to re h| for aj IN CYCLONES E CIIICAGO, May at 10 dead | were received here eporte « en injured tor Kannan and Win, re t night's and # today from nado centers in low Winconsin, Lone 1 ported five dead there in la twinter | In Boone, none were where four per sald to have been killed. were W sd, Newton. two dead and Denison, killed death toll t wrecked track € and ‘MRS. HENDRICKSON SAYS IT WAS JUST WHAT SHE NEEDED lowa 60 houses ntood at tending Kansans wcroms Wille hooks Eleven Thousand Bottles of Tanlac in Eight Weeks BENEFIT ARE GREAT In every city, town and communi ty, throughout t United States and Cangda, where introduced, the many living, | enthusiastic witnenges to its remark: | able merit. And although placed on sale in Seattle scarcely two months ago, the Bartell Drug Company, Inc., ave sold and distributed nearly en thousand bottles, In ay alone more than three hundred and thirty—or to exact-—three bun dred and thirty-four well-known ple called to purclifixe the medict and to tell of the benefits they have derived from its use, Mra, M. H Hendrickson, who is a lifelong rent | dent of Seattle and lives at 1321 Yew ler street, in relating her experience with the medicin a “For several years my system has been in a very badly run-down con dition, I have also wuffered from in digestion for a long time, which, Jing the past two years, became very much worse, I could not digest my food properly and I suffered much pain and distress from the gas on my stomach, which at times would] press on my heart, causing a chok ing sensation and shortness of breath. I always had to be very careful of my diet and even then 1 suffered. My nerves became no shat tered that I couldn't get sufficient sleep and my strength and energy seemed to leave me entirely 1 used to weigh one hundred and eighteen pounds, but I kept falling off until I weighed only ninety three, and it neemned that nothing could help me. Finally I decided from what others maid Tanlac bad done for them to see if it would help me, and I must may I have been wonderfully benefited. My appetite ix much bet ter and I gan eat many things I could not eat before. My nerves are so mudH improved that I can sleep well and my strength is gradually comfig back to me, I have already regained five pounds of my lost weight, and judging from the way I am now improving, I will soon reach my old weight, one hundred and cighteen pounds, and feel as well as I ever did. It's @ real pleasure to recommend such a medicine and I gladly give this statement to be used in letting others know about it There are thousands of people who complain of being nervous and run- down. They are not sick exactly, but feel tired out and good for nothing mont of the They need some | thing to build them up and throw off the symptoms of this weakened, de bilitated condition The system, besides being purified by Tanlac, in toned up orated as the medicine assinting the blood, reinvigorates the constitution, overcoming as it seems to quickly do, nervousness, indiges tion, non-asaimilation of the food. headache, backache, kidney derange. ments, general debility and many other ailments that are so common to the thousands of half-sick, de pressed men and women Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under personal di rection of a special Tanlac represent ative.—Advertisement niac has been | dur time the Rheumatism Remarkable Home Care Given by One Who Had It-—He Wants Every Safferer to Benefit Send Ne Money—Jnst Your Address of awful suffering and misery Mark H. Jack how terrible rheuma: know how he was cured. Bartell Drug Co. Sells Nearly | LETTERS ‘| Its rome Would Eliminate All Animal Acts Dear Mins Gre , beasts have beem@ealled unimals, It in a mistake fall no low as man 1 did not come to this conclusion in one minute, or from reading book; but Iam sure if any reads London's “Mich other of hin heart, if he be Inspired with a desire to wipe out {the horrible cruelties to the dump | beast, which God has decreed should by man’s inferior In thin book, neribes more fully | unne the lower Nothing Jac Jerry me, will Jack London de and truthfully the wary crucities during the period of animal training for shows and circuses than I could ever hope to do. In the preface of his won derful book, he tells of a way to wipe it out, that is, by leaving the theatre during the showing of an thus showing the pub: He's dixapproval am sure there . like myself, a short time ago ed much an act thru igno of the terrible torture going d the scenes KILEEN, | | animal act | are thousands, All Who Become 2 | Must Register Dear Miss Grey: I am a Serbian boy, a and have not citizenship| papers. Am I supposed to on the Sth of June? Yeu, under the new draft law aliens must register the same as citizens Urges Law to Revoke Bequests to Animals Dear Mian Grey: R appeared in your paper the picture of a dog that has just fallen heir an apartment, a fourfigure bank account and a paid up cemetery lot Inn't that enough to arouse us, as & government, to make a new war measure that prohibits willing prop- erty to pet animals, except to those that have saved lives, and then nly enough for the lifetime of naid mais. How much better it would have made the world should that will have been made out instead to nome wife whose husband has to claim exemption because of her de pendency, when he otherwise might have enlisted as a volunteer And then there are the starving babes of Hurope! That small fortune could be utilized so as to save a number of babies’ lives. The will of Edward R. Radcliff cannot be revoked. But there is one thing we can do, and that is to make 2 law an I already have mtated As a War measure, to affect the wills of thone not deceased, or else the government should commandeer property willed to pets, to prevent injustice to our country. A VOTER TO BE. tly there such This Girl Wants to Fight in Trenches Dear Mins Grey Ever since I saw @ certain war picture, I ha wanted to be a soldier. I don't un derstand why the government won't draft and enlist girls as well as men There are many women in this world as men, and I think we should the boys I would much rather be in the trenches than here working for the Red Crows, Do you think if I cut my hair and dressed like a boy 1 could get into the lines? ALICE. v atrocities committed inet the French and Belgium women, also the Legion of Death, women soldiers of Rus 6 wght to convince any in telligent woman that nature has not fitt@l her to become a sol dier, except, perhaps, for own welf defense, in case country were invaded You think you would rather be in the trenches than here at home, aiding the Red Cross be- cause you are totally ignorant of Nfe in the trenches, If the war continues, and our women do not see fit to aid the govern. ment in every possible way, it is quite possible they WILL be drafted, but not to fight her Pawnbrokers Report to Police Dept. Dear Miss Grey: Must the owner ; goods pay the amount them by a awnbroker the goods are found in a pawn A VICTIM Pawnbrokers report to the po- Ke ps received by them. This saves them from the charge of receiving stolen goods. The owner must pay to recover goods. Unmarried Women Can Lead Full Life Dear Miss P I am 23 years! he says “1 had Sharp Flashes Shooting In th by Mum |tlem. I suffered as only th it know, from any form of trouble to try this marvelou power, Don't send a cent; simply fill out the coupon below and I will it free to try and it bas p looked-for a matiam, you may send the price of tt one dollar, but understand, I do not want your. m © per feotly gatinfies Tan't fair? Why auffer any longer whe itive relief im thus offered you n't delay. Write today n pom free? TRIAL COL i A. A respect, but not love, wants me to marry him another man, who has never! indicated any special interest in me. I think it is wrong to marry with out love, but convention forbids me to show my love to the other man,| I cannot be an old maid, Can't you suggest some way to help me out? the conventions the meantime your ideas, “Old maids” have be- almost extinet, The wom in of today who, for any reason, remains unmarried, may’ lead 4 full and busy life Respect wait. In m™E(ROTE- OTTO F RLOEL, Store Hours From 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Fumed, Waxed and Jacobean Oak and Mahogany ROCKERS ai CHAIRS Reduced to Sixty Chairs and Rockers are as- sembled for imme- diate clearance. These include Oak Chairs and Rockers in all finishes, and have genuine leath- er and _ tapestry seats; Mahogany Chairs and Rockers with tapestry seats. Nearly all of them are samples of discontinued lines, at savings that will average better than one- third. There Is a Growing Demand for MONARCH Malleable Ranges Sates Careful Housewives The housewife who op- erates her kitchen in a business-like manner will use no other than a Mon- arch Malleable Range. 7 More than 15,000 Seattle housewives are now using Monarch Ranges because the Monarch has demon- strated its superiority over all other makes of ranges. It uses less fuel. It acts quicker. It operates easier. It is more attractive. Bu-Geveremest Physictan 1111 FIRST AVE. oF 169 WASHINGTON sr. RIGNT DRUG CO. STORES do our bit for Uncle Sam as well as|~ Relieves—-Gas in the Stomach, Sour | Stomach (heartburn), Belching, Swell. ing and Full Feeling so frequently complained of after meals, in TWO MINI lSc, at your druggist, or dd to any ad. dress upon re price by The Bellingham Chemical Co, by The i ham, Wash. that |- Can Lundberg Rupture > five free trial to prov y. LUNDBERG Co. Third Ave. its superior- anon Seattle | | Napoleon used i Good June What he said to his advisors. * Napoleon’s advisors fre- quently remonstrated at the price he personally paid for his victories—his ceaseless labors, endless vigils and ever-broad- ening plans. He replied, ‘“‘Gentlemen, the price of progress inevitably rises.’ . Good Judgment and large purchasing facilities of the man- ufacturers of Tom Keene have long enabled them to offer un- usual value. in spite of the fact that the recent advance in price was only to 6c, this cigar will be in all respects as good or in some res during 1918 than it was last year. Notice this. It confirms your Good Judgment in preferring Tom Kecne. | TOM KEENE| The, Cigar made with good Jud: Uncle Sem promises prompt deliv- ery to his boys. It's Good Judg- ment to send them Tom Keenes. HEMENWAY & MOSER CIGAR CO. Seattle, Wash. AR} KINco. i aw SAP Sipe mH I IS I OCP Hitt i

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