The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 27, 1918, Page 5

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NOW PLAYING | 1 SESSUE HAYAKAWA “WHITE MANS LAW] | “The White Man’s Law”—Africa with its barbaric pomp, and a girl, are the : terest and rare appeal! | IMPERSONATED DRAFT MAN; WAS PAID $1,500 . Oo 7 Oo CAMP LEWIS, May 27.—Contess ing that John F. Sanches, an Amert can citizen in California, had paid him $1,500 to Impersonate him in the draft army, | Company M, 346th infantry, has ask G in the Stomach, Sour ed permission to enlist in his own ach(heartburn), Belching. Swell. | and Full Feeling so frequently | zen.~ complained of after meals, in TWO MINUTES. Trial Package, 15¢, at your druggist. or mailed to any ad dress upon receipt of price by The ham Chemical Co, Belling- Wash. JESSE A. FRYE DIES ‘The sudden death of Joase A. Frye early Sunday morning, from cerebral hemorrhage, removes one of Seattle's | prominent attorneys, Mr. Frye held |the positon of U, 8. attorney from 1902 to 1907. He came to Belling |ham in 1891, from where he was l elected to the legisiature in 1899. ee ae ee ee will keep the Hun away. MOORE Giohoumbauledle MA Orpheum Vaudev = Here’s This Week’s Bill Don’t Allow Yourself to Miss It Return to Vaudeville of the Incomparable Pair \ PART OF THE PHEUM CIRCUIT AIN. Ss 3390 222 THEATRE , framework for a story of compelling in- Lino Carlo, private in| name and become an American citi er De Haven & Flora. Parker In New Songs Norton & Melnotte In “Song, Style and Steps” . Ruth Budd The Girl With the Smile Valyda & Brazil Nuts In ‘Moments of Musical Comedy’ Eddie Mack and Dot Williams Vaudeville Novelty Dancers Seattle's Own Fung Chinese Cartoonist ‘ ORPHEUM TRAVELOGUE CONCERT ORCHESTRA Glen Anders and Cothpany Present “The Honeymoon” Aaron Hoffman's Latest Comedy 10c 25c 50c 75c STR enna Matinees 10c, 25c, 50c. There’s a Matinee Every Day complexion oeautifier, at very, small cost any drug store or toilet counter will supply white for a few cente. this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each ishes disappear, and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes, jit ie harmless Lemon Juice | said tum Your grocer has the lemons and et ye three ounces of orchard Massage to tal and see how freckles and blem an Yos! Given a Day’s Wag Every Employe of This Store Has mal taxes, n & much larger peen attempted ke them up? with any sort of confidence or know! es to the Red Cross. Have You Given as Much? For the Medium priced matched bedroom sets and dining room sets, especially assembled for the in- spection of those for whom June wedding bells will ring. Here is a neat and attractive Dining Room Set that would be just the thing in the new household. It is only a sample of the many from which you can make a selection in This example of medium-priced Bedroom Suites our dining room furniture section. is one you can see amid the assembly on display here, Remember that now is the t able things, like garden hose, you can use them all summer. “ADDED TO AC FURNITU [M.A GOTTSTEIN SEATTLE'S POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS| It is well to make selections early. Royal Morris Chairs A revelation in com- fort and ease, finished in, golden, waxed or fumed oak, and cov- ered in imitation leather, genuine leath- er or tapestry. Priced at $30.00 up, ime to get the season- lawn mowers, etc., so COUNT” .« RE CO. But the war profits and incomes upon which the increased taxes will be levied will be the profits and in- comes of the calendar year 1918, male of long Ume bonds must be effected than has What are th bankers to think of the certifica’ i€ they do not certainly know where the money is to come from which is n PRES. WILSON ASKS NEW TAX; exnet tank until the very eve of ita /edgo of their. own affairs If they do iy; ‘ontinued From Page Onel perfor I; t know what taxes they are to pay % * Remedy Inequalities Jand what economies and adjpet large a proportion of them by loan The present tax laws are marred,| ments of their business, they munt and it in evidentt hat the four bill moreover, by inequalities which | effect? 1 cannot axmure the ed jons now provided for by taxation | ought to be remedied, Indisputable | of a successful administration Will not of themselves sustain the | facts, every one; and we cannot alter | treasury in 1918 If the quent |ureatly enlarged budget to which we or blink them, ‘To state them ts ar-| further taxation ia to be left un |must immediately look forward fument enough And yet, perhaps |elded until 1919 Ww nnot in fairness wait {) YOu Will permit me to dwell for acno:| “The consideration that domtr the end of the fiscal year ia at hand | Ment upon the situation they dis:/every other now and makes every to apprise our people of the taxes Enormous loans ly spent |other seem trivial and negligible, ts they must pay on thelr earnings of |!" the stimulation of industry of al-| the winning of the war, We are not ithe present calendar year, whose ac |MOxt every sort produce infladions| only in the midst of the war, we ure untings and expenditures will then 884 extravagances which presently |at the very peak and crinis of It as Giieed make the whole economic structure | Hundreds of thousands of our men juextionable a ecure, “and the | carrying arts with them “We cannot get increased taxen! very t f credit in cut away, Only |our fi ein the field | Unless the country Knows what they fair, equitably distributed taxation of | ships are crowding faster and faster to be and practices Che necewary | the widest drawing, chiefly from the | to the ports of France and 1 economy to make them available, | sources which would be likely to de:|with regiment after regiment | Definitenons, early definiteness, ax moralize credit by their very abun: | sands after thousands to join them ‘ to be in absolut: dance, can prevent Inflation and keep | until the y shall be b and consful adminis our industrial system free of specula: | brought to a reckoning with man wury; it cannot! Uon and waste. kind. tn Bente, and it swurt raise ito regs] ig We cual mammal. tein, || Mie Be We Pages, as lations in haste if it ix not to do ite epee, te War Bree Shoe Bl, ng eepsentb vaoe omes and luxuries for | mission © er enterprise must be p 4 with greater and greater energy. The volume of our might lmust steadily and rapidly be aug | mented until! there can be no quem |Uon of reninting it, If that ts to be It would be manifestly unfair to |accomplished, gentlemen, — money | For Freckles || wsit’tnut the sary ‘monibe of |ust sunain it so tie utmowt. | 1919 to say what they are to be. “Our financial program Sead no RES t might be difficult, I should im-| more be left in doubt or suffered to Girlet Make beauty lotion at agine, to run the mill with water|lag than our ordnance program, our home for a few centa. Try it! that had alr ¥ gone over the | ship prog or our munition > wheel. Moreover, taxes of that sort|sram or our program for making Be will not be paid until the June of | millions of men ready, These others Tyg tustia ‘aeateinien yee ee next year and the treasury must an-|are not programs indeed, but merely ounces of orchafa white, shake well,|Ulpate them. It myst use the| plana upon paper, unless there in to Jand you havé'a quarter plat of the ™ey they are to produce before it|be an unque ple supply of beat freckle and. tan. loticn. ang) i# due. It must sell short time cer-|money, ‘That is the nltuation, and| , tifieates of indebtedness. In the au.|it is the situation which creates the | duty, no chotce \ ‘There is only {duty, We must m | inhnens or fear of « ities in adjourned. The elections wilt Ko those who think least of it; to those who go to the conastit © preference of ours. ne way to meet that t it without self. naequences Must Decide Now uencios, without explanations or ex nd how are investors to ap-|cuses, with @ plain ord of duty || proach the purchase of these bonds | faithfully and disinterestedly per formed. Tax Profiteering “1 for one am always confident that the people of this country will give a just verdict upon the service of the men who act for them when the facts are such that no man can inguise or conceal them. There in no danger of deceit now, An intense and pitiless light beats upon every man and every action in this tragic plot of war that is now upon the stage. If lobbyists hurry to Wash ington to attempt to turn what you do in the matter of taxation to their protection or advantage, the light | will beat also on them. There in abundant fuel for the ght In the | treasury with regard to profits of jevery nort. The profiteering that | cannot be got at by the restraints of conscience and love of country, can be got at by taxation. “I am advising you to act upon this matter of taxation now, gentle men, not because I do not know that You can nee and interpret the facts j well and with as cleag a perception of the obligations involved as I can, | but because there is a solemn nati» }faction in sharing with you the re sponsibilities of such a time,’ - COUNCIL WILL MEET District No. 10, council of patri lotle service, will meet at & p. m | Tuesday at Greyerbieh! hall, 2715 | Jackson st. Judge Ronald and Pliny Alien will speak. ‘MRS. LYNCH SAYS | SHE IS HAPPIEST | WOMAN IN TOWN Gains Sixteen Pounds by Taking Tanlac and Trou- bles Are Overcome SUFFERED 14 YEARS “It certainly seems remarkable | that, after trying almost every con- ceivable medicine, two bottles of Tanlac should give me that long- ought-for relief, but it has, and not | only that, it has increased my weight |16 pounds, besides,” said Mrs. Fran- K. Lynch, who resides at 2318] |N. 65th st. recently, in one of the! most interesting statements yet pub- lished in connection with the Master | Medicine in, this section of the} country Before I began taking Tanlac,”| Mrs. Lynch continued, “I was suffers ing from stomach trouble in ite | worst form, and for 14 years my life was just one unkroken period of minery. I could eat nothing but what} would sour on my stomach, causing jand the duty they impose just as|! War Sav. ings and Thrift Stamps Main Office | | ‘The 'THAT the market on for ..6% my collars of pique or with lace. to 46. \| | i} | MILLION IS AIM OF MERCY DRIVE Continued From Page Onel —— ——_—____* licitation committee, said Sunday night: “Results thus far are gratify- ing. However, many persons, who from my personal knowledge I know to be thoroly patriotic, are not suf. ficiently impreswed with the magni- tude of our task and the personal re sponsibility of each of us." eee ‘The military band at Fort Lawton gave its services Monday in an effort to arouse still greater enthusiasm for Mercy Monday. Donations from the city schools are still to be totaled in the war fund drive. A large amount is expected from this source. The proceeds of many business houses Monday will be given over entirely to the Red Crons. eee ‘The Ives barber shop, in the Hoge building, will donate all proceeds to the war fund on Monday. eee ‘The Circuit theatre will operate for the benefit of the Red Cross Monday | from 11 a. m. to 6 p. m. eee The Theo Je concert, at the Presbyterian church Monday evening at 8:20; "The Claim,” at the Wilkes theatre, played by the Wilkes com. pany: y.” by Monte Carter, at the Oak theatre, and a big industrial frolic at the Hippodror Monday night, will be the closing fea tures of the war fund drive, all pro ceeds from the four attractions to go to the Red Crons. eee and bloating, and such awful) n that I could hardly stand it. I| suffered from palpitation of the heart and a dreadful choking sensa- | tion, and was #o nervous the least noise would upset me. I was con-| fined to my bed more than half of| the time, and although I tried every: | thing under the sun, I knew of or | heard about, I kept getting worse. I had almost forgotten what a good | night's sleep was, and finally I got to where I could not retain anything on my stomach, I lived for weeks on nothing but milk, and finally even that went back on me, and my stom- | ach would not even retain cold water: 1 suffered a great deal from dizziness. and just two days before I began | taking Tanlac I had a spell and fell jon my own doorsteps. “I also suffered terribly tae rheumatism in my knee joints, and | for years had a sharp, stinging pain | under my left shoulder blade. I lost weight until I went down from 160 | pounds to 134, “But I believe I am the happiest woman in’ town now, and I owe my restoration to Tanlac and a lady friend from Pittsburg, who advised | me to try it I haven't an ache or a) pain now, my nerves are perfectly | quiet, and I sleep just like a ine | every night. My appetite is fine and I can eat just anything I want without suffering a particle aft ward, Why, I went to a banquet last night and ate fish and lots of other things that I have not eaten in years, My friends joked me about eating #0 much, and I told them en dented the privi long that I had to make up for lost time. | I now weigh 150 pounds—have al.! ready regained 16 pounds of my lost weight—and such wonderful results is enough to make anyone happy Drug Stores under the personal di rection of a special Tanlac represent: ative.—Advertisement Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartel! | and “Boheme. William H. Todd, of the Todd Ship. building Corporation, here on busi ness, has planked down $15,000 as a contribution to the Red Cross in Se attle district. Police kept busy tagging autos for | the Red Cross Sunday. One ener, getic cop was still active at the city | limits as darkness descended. He was looking for departing cars with. out tags, didn't have a chance to get away The police have now raised more than $30,000 for the war fund drive | by tagging autos and fining Jaywalk \ers. Great Northern and Northern Pa- | cific employes at the King st. station held a flag-raising ceremony Mon: day noon, participated in by all the men who donated a day's pay to the | Red Cross war fund drive. | . The entire receipts of Pantages, | both afternoon and evening perform ances, are to go to swell the city's total, it was announced by headquar ters Monday 'THEO KARLE TO SING FAREWELL HERE TONIGHT Theo Ka ‘amous tenor, will sing his farewell concert in Seattle at the First Presbyterian church, Monday night, for the benefit of the Red Cross, and leave for Camp Lewis Tuesday to take up training for the national army ‘The city’s favorites of the favorite tenor will be included in the program of music, which is entirely in Eng lish, except for Handel's “Care Selve” and selections from “Mephistopheles” Mrs. John Spargur and J, 8. Gra rangementa, Models for Stout Women in the Special Purchase Sale of Gossard Front-Lace Corsets Upper Main Floor this special purchase is prolific of corset styles suited to the stout woman is one of the most inter- esting phases of the sal more adapted to the needs of the STOUT WOMAN than the GOSSARD, and for this women should supply their corset needs for the present and for the future from this sale, where value is paramount. Gossard Front Lace Corsets—Models that if marked in the regular way would sell at A len Gossard Front Lace c soveeto —These corset styles would, if marked in the regular way, sell at vi 5, oh 50 and $10.00. Special in this sale, choice .........+4+ Voile Waists Special, Tuesday, 65c Upper Main Floor special purchase of neat summer styles with large The assortment displays plain white, checks in self color and colored pin stripes, in sizes 36 These were marked to sell wpecial at 79c. reduced for a quick male to, each, Sizes for Small Women [A | that are very appropriate for the Miss or small woman. ment displays shades of ROE RE Tan, Copenhagen and Navy Blue, Short-waisted bodice models, with tunic or full straight skirts, feature the variety, all of which are enhanced with such an novelty collars and pockets, enbroid- ery and Georgette. Sizes 14, 16, 18, 34 and 36, yards of dot and figure designs on fancy mesh, in colors of Formerly Brown, Blue, Purple and White and Black. Special for Tuesday, and when he found one it | ham have been in charge of the ar i Rhodes Co.| | We know of no corset reason stout Special in this sale $1.95 - $2.95 collars of same material trimmed Yor Tuesday they will be 65¢. Silk Dresses 15 Bags, useful when attending the theatre, for shopping and knitting. Displayed in the latest attractive color combina- tions. $8.00 Ribbon bees cones 06 Special $8.95 Upper Main Floor special purchase of attractively styled silk taffeta, Crepe de Chine and Georgette Dresses his assort- $3.00 Ribbon Bags .... ¢ “sis Gray, Green, Plum and Black 25¢ and $0¢ Seri: ms and Marquisettes Special, Tuesday Yard, 20¢ Main Floor, Rear These curtain fabrics fre equally sulted for — the home or Summer camp. They are 36 inches wide and have fancy openwork borders, Choice of white, cream and ecru, effective trimming 35e. Se a yard MAKING, CITIZENS OF ALIENS IN ARMY AT CAMP LEWIS TODAY CAMP LEWIS, May 27.—The pro- cons of making American citizens jout of alien enlisted men of the national army, whose loyalty can be vouched for by their officers, is go ing forward here today. Men from the 166th depot brigade were the first to appear before the deputy naturalization commissioner. After their captains and one other! officer have certified to their loy alty, each man is put thu @ cate chism of questions by a series of sol- diers. The final step is the swear- ing of allegiance before a federal judge. The court will sit in the Y. M. C. A. auditorium, only at such times TWo PACKING FIRMS / ACCUSED OF S UNFIT MEAT TO AF WASHINGTON, May 27.—C of selling meat “unfit for human sumption” to the army are against Morris & Co. and Wi Co., two of the five great houses. Thousands of pounds of fit meat and poultry were sold Camp Travis, Tex., it is charged the federal trade commission. as groups of 250 men are ready. There are 2,127 aliens in the #1 division and 3,072 in other tions of the camp, mostly 166th depot brigade. Forty is the time that it takes to new citizen in the wholesale p being used here. Perfect Health Is Yours If the Blood Is Kept Pu —_, Every Human Ail-}its torturing pains; Catarrh, often ment Is Directly Traceable |‘°Terenner of dread consum, 2 to Impurities in the Blood Scrofula, Eczema, Tetter, and other disfiguring skin 4 You carnot overestimate the im-| Malaria, which makes the stro portance of keeping the blood free of | men helpless, and many other dig- impurities. When you realize that | ¢ases are the direct result of imp the heart is constantly pumping thi: blood. vital fluid to all parts of the bog. You can easily avoid all of tl you can easily see that any impu diseases, and rid the system of in the blood will cause serious com- by the use of 8, 5. S., the wor plications. blood remedy that has been in Any slight disorder or impurity stant use for more than fifty years. that creeps into the blood is a source |S. 8. 8. cleanses the blood th of danger, for every vital organ of/ly, and routs every vestige of im- the body depends upon the blood | purity. It is sold by druggists everye supply to properly perform its func: | where. ¢ ons. For valuable literature and medical advice absolutely free, write toda¥ to Many painful and dangerous dis eases are the direct result of a bad|the Medical Dept, Swift Specific condition of the blood. Among the | Company, 437 Swift Laboratory, At most serious are Rheumatism, with | lanta, Ga, Cotton Covered or All Rubber Garden Hose 50-Foot Sections, Worth $7.50 $4.98 Choice of Cotton Covered Hose in 3-4 inch diameter, or All Rubber Hose in 1-2 inch diameter. Buy your garden hose now, while our present stock lasts, as our next ship- ments are bound to be higher in price. Special, 50 feet $4.98 NO PHONE OR C. 0. D. ORDERS! | |

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