Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1918. PAGE 6 ANTI- TYPHOID || The Flag “a Flag for All ‘Al Vaccination Has Robbed } ted is the blood of America War of a Great Ter rror { And from heart to heart is its call, ON Tan vonned thie war of at|And its crimson hue flows the whole world thru, nat haa robbed J " > -Anti-typboid vac-|For America stands for all. | efnauion America stands for All, } ‘The anti-typhoid ark to America’s call! treatment con America! America! All for America, nints of three In Yor America stands for All. serogget Redpge? White is the light of America, typhoid or |As it beacons our outer wall, arn And it sheds it rays thra the war-worn days, ‘The injections ar nerally given) As its bright light stands for all. in the arm, Bach America stands for All, at an interval Shout from her outer wall are never any serious remuits Amcricat Amertea! All for America, erally there in only a slight local re Yor America stands for All. action, some redness, swelling and 3 4 pert wih h paplaly pannen away Blue is the hue of America ‘Treatment can be taken by both! In the bend of its heaven-high wall, : adults and children and successtully | And the world around by that color is crowned, SEATTLE STAR] THE OLDEST FLAG THAT FLIES car Union Mt. eventh Ave. OF SCTUPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE oF NeWsraruns wa Service of the United Press Assectation tered at Seattia Wash. Postoffice as Second-Clase Matter ut Of city, Ade per month; # montha, $LI5; @ montha $2.10; Year, $4.00. By carrier, city, 80e.a month De. Phone Maim 008. Private! Fe Honor the flag today. Honor it by good deeds ii day. And, remember, June 28 is War Savings mp day. ts and Babies Ingeulated persons are perfectly 2°] So its true blue stands for All. ] ‘The period of protection lasts from Ameri nds for All, London is already facing a contest between her land-| | tye ven Pann two to three years or more. The treatment is expecially recom i for thowe who are brought ; t with the sick from occu-|High in the sky of America n oF necessity and to vacation Are the stars which never shall fall, inte and travelers who leave the ' . as s they shine let them be a for a stay in the country. Its value|And as long a 5 th if aa "All 1 be a sign in the army, of course, has been| Phat America stands for 4 America! America! All for America, For America stands for All. and her war-babies. In spite of the disapproval of landlords, children WILL} a continue to get themse' ded born. It is not yet consid- Have a Baby ered good form to kill off} to Get Low Taxes those #0 unfortunate as Red! fully demonstrated America stands for All, EY CITY. N. J. June uf arrive neath apartment} Much of the “fall typhoid” ts On guard! lest America fall who discriminate | house roofs. All the most | brought into the city during the America! America! All for America, tenants with children will vengeful landlord can do is! wummper months by persons who Yor America stands for All. to pay more taxes after (his to hustle out the parents | have innocently been the victims of EDMUND VANCE COOK, | insanitary conditions in the country (Copyright, 1918, N. F. A) and baby and hang a neat sign at the house entrance— “No Children Allowed.” | As a direct result of the) war many young wives of) professional and business} men who lost their lives or) © wrecked their health at the; front, find themselves forc- lo earn a living for their children, themselves, and, often, ‘a disabled husband. is no lack of employment. What is lacking is a} place and provision for the care of the war-babies, | i children they must leave to go to their work. | mother in a government office reported that| been “hounded out of her lodgings and_ refused | ‘and again at other places because of her children.”} could mv leave them at home, nor could she take them| work. relieve the condition, a chain of day nurseries is) One hundred and forty-one years ago today there appeared on the face of the globe established where these babies may have proper food! new flag. It was the flag of a new nation, a state dedicated to freedom, liberty and watchful care of trained nurses. justice. It floated over a people at war in a coun undeveloped but rich in hope and da) agit Sop ie Sipe ger of Lcergyaind mothers are} |purpose. It floats today over the sons and daughters of those peoples and over all oe BOL & solution of the problem. the other human beings who have sought safety and freedom beneath its folds. it is needed in England—and will be needed in It is the Stars ad Stripes, floating on this the anniversary of its birth over mil- BF age oa a bay Sink aan pee as well—is some municipal or governmental regu-/lions of homes from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from Canada’s border to the Gulf, and|iass windows of Baumhacki’s dra- the powers of landlords to prevent the eviction| what is newest and so superbly grand—it floats this day on the battlefields of Europe, | pery stores broken in several places, its who have the patriotism to become parents. where the hosts of democracy are fighting the hordes of autocracy! and se be about sv gi een ae, Our flag has a history rich in deeds and glorious in hope. It is the oldest of all the ule tule thee nrg la Seattle draft officials have not yet received the |flags that now fly in the whole world. The flags of our allies are younger, the present] ered, lying on the pavement, a crow- draft from Gen Crowder. But they should worry. | Tricolor of France appeared in 1794, fully 17 years after Old Glory had come into exist-| bar, which had evidently been drop of men who have waded successfully thru Italy’s flag was born in 1 ; the British flag in 1801; Portugal, 1815; Belgium, |Pe¢ >” these hse gh “g ae: an inal questionnaires can't be feazed by anything nd our South American allies n later. The flags of Japan and China of tod. Wlasou een ho io temiives G18 are not as old as the Sta and Stripes not stop their flight, he overtook oes iapamanel But it is not because our flag is the oldest of all flags, that we love it so well and| ‘ree of them to Help honor it so truly. Our flag is the emblem of the highest ideals any nation has ee ee ee s out to reach. There is something great and good back of our flag, liberty, justice, hu-|aia, and the burgiarn were ordered Sam wants to send tons of blackberry jam to|manity and equality. However, let us not be misunderstood. It is not the cloth of which|to bait. ‘The surprising discovery s over in France. The British have found that|our national emblem is made that we love and for which our sons gladly storm the heights |*™* ten sade that, tho nattily at irs crave jam and that it proves a splendid ration /of fame and death. We honor and respect it and die for it because. | tata ye ae Oe the bargiers ! Portions. segs 3 “A thoughtful mind, when it sees a nation’s flag, sees not the flag, but the nation] ‘rhe girls confemed that they of berries are ripening in the Puyallup valley.| itself,” said that great preacher and American, Henry Ward Beecher. formed part of an organized gang of James F. Gannon, director of v and finance, finds it out families are to be annoyed they have chiktren,” Gan. y administration ‘Thin form of typhoid fever claims ss cbse womething lke 35,000 lives in this country every year ‘The value of anti-typhoid vaccina 46 Wright. In 1897 he vaccinated 17 pernona In 1898 he inoculated 4.000 Hritish soldiers in India, In the Boer war with Dr. Lischman, he supervised the inoculation of 100. 000 British soldiers, Now every nol dier ts no protecte False the tax valuations of j landlords to the limit. The ting landlord will have to For Sore, Tired, Swollen Feet; For Aching, Tender, Calloused Feet i Painful Coms —WUse ‘i 7 be SATLOME ELD * (From the Vienna Neves Journal) wnment has contracted for the berries to be made And today, on this anniversary of our flag’s birth, the Stars and Stripes float in|?® poten — here ape gy Sep F : i France—the banner of dawn to the peoples whom the iron heel of German military might|$),o nat carried on burglaries In the] {ired feet. get your foot misery. an alarming shortage of pickers threatens opera-} seeks to crush into cruel and heartless slavery as it demolishes their homes, ignores their|ouuying districts of Vienna for the| . Good-bye,. corns, callouses, bun-|comfortable your feet feel. rights and destroys their lives. past three months with great suc-| ons and raw spots. No ace a Get a pons box of “Tix” berry growers have appealed to Seattle for help All along the battle line, from the channel to the Alps, this flag—Our Flag—is the|/%™ ss. sal he yay NG pol: Ph ~ xa Me wane indreds of women could go to the berry fields—and| flag of hope and promise, the emblem which adds strength to the arm and courage to|# of them could take their children. Shelter houses, the Heist aa therty’s fighters. God speed the day when we make good this hie meg (E » “ticks,” stoves, and fuel are furnished pickers. They|promise. For until that day has arrived the power of the Huns cannot be overcome a 50 cents a crate for picking, with a bonus if they|and civilization will continue struggling in the grasp of her worst enemies, the Teuton | = thru the season. and the Turk. agony “Tin” Is magical, acta feet, glad feet, feet that n right off. “Tis” draws out all the | swell, never hurt, never get olsonone exudations which puff| Beware of tmitations! JUNE 28—SAVE It offers a splendid opportunity for a healthy outing “Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just, country with a chance to earn money. iN And this be our motto: ‘In God is our trust.’ ttle should gladly lend a hand to her likable and And the Star Spangled Banner in triumph shall wave | the free and the a of the brave.” ' 0,000 HARVEST HANDS | TACKLE KANSAS CROPS the land of e neighbor—the Puyallup valley. » O'er fhe season of picking begins in the first week of July. ——— p growers want written assurance from individual pick- €8 soon as possible, if they intend to come to the fields, can be assigned. " If you want to help, write W. H. Paulhamus or Gus| meeeerson of Puyallup, or to the Puyallup Chamber of | Now comes Woodrow Through Quality at Wilson in favor of the fed- suffrage amendment. Shades of states’ rights! NOT SUCH A TERRIGLE DIF.) With chains of matrim a democratic president waives the states’ rights FERENCE f “broke Ri h P e gaboo, then the supreme court, indeed, with its pa- We regret the mistake that w goon ee we wherever the a ig t rice thetic interpretation of the child labor law, is left alone made ast week sue In regar will average in its narrow groove. ee of Mine le Merritt Wee of Yower, Saletan wu great me day leveled be t To practice true economy is not The Postal Telegraph waives the right to fire em- c nt ‘ bis FORRES. nos # who join a union, its president informed Presi- cies bala beiteeel ea only wise from a personal stand- "mae ne Kaiser Carlton of the West- | Germans. Not r | And buffet Chief Joe! Warren on the or, but it’s really a national ‘inion will no doubt be equally “kind” ere long. disatss | pate a eS tbe eouall F . 1 ealeiaicaseieinaaiaall "| TAILORING CO. duty. “ when he thinks. It may be true, but] The woe of everything. To whrk is - That “utter disregard in which the kaiser holds | when be thinks, | It may be rus, i hard, ; Headquarters for lives of his soldiers” doesn’t apply to his siz sons, |} o.as expand because they fail to| And tion irks the average * e ° who face the camera more frequently than the think | be Suits, Coats and Brin in U. ee | And pleasure's futile, for it does not g g p One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street ad | Colonel Luster has been nominated 1 : P . eaident for brigadier gen-| And for ambition there is no reward, Venus in the Seattle Girls’ Victory carnival, to be held to explain tha nel Luster is one H Setiiorts naval training camp. This should OEpest ot prc ate ait ot of cra in the pote Step Lively! Corns ‘ —_—_—_—_ Be that as it may, Leaves A. Blank | 6 ” Pay up your income tax before close of business |'!ves in LaPorte, Ind, and Mr Hunn | ui i e S- ‘ow and save Uncle Sam unnecessary bookkeep- inept Ry renee img and waste of time. ? ' eae | Crusts of bread bring tears of joy to the eyes of A WAIL OF WOK little children in northern France. Can't YOU do with |-rne woo of spring and summer Our Reserves Placing in stock quanti- ties of fine Worsted Suits bought months ago, and put in reserve. The Great Corn Toonener of the| ue. Never Falls, Paintens. what a the us | a FO hag 2g eae | smn Duar Big Now it is apparent why coat lapels were invented— trodden ways, | ormer Market Prices the resting place ideal for buttons of honor—Red Cross, |P0l* ™moens and stare at night, and) Liberty Loans, War C ee fin % peeneeee eee —cerprowrrerrerasere| sunlight plays ‘The woe of woman. Greatest of all Panamas Fine we hest and Thrift Stamp army. Full-blowing where the wind “| ' Few Drops When Corns Hurt, nity encased in clothes, P. H S ! . rang rom, the sweat and soul of e ee nose. The woe of avoirdupols. Surplus Y flesh { tle J] Upon us steals before we can { Fine Worsted: and Serge Suits at less than the market cost of today— which means a saving to you of at least $10 to $15 on every suit. Don’t let corns ache twice! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers— Here’ 8 magic! 4 Sen No humbug! Any corn,, Put a few drops directly whether h soft or be-| upon any tender, aching corn tween the toes, will loosen orcallus, Instantly the sore- right up and lift out, with-| ness disappears and shortly out any pain. the corn or callus will loosen This drug is called freez-| and can be lifted off with one apd is a compound of| the fingers. ether discovered by a Cin-| Freezone doesn't eat out cinnati chemist. | the corns or calluses but Ask at any drug store for! shrivels them without any a small bottle of freezone,| irritation. which will cost but a trifle, Women! Keep freezone but is sufficient to rid one’s) on your dreaser and apply a feet of every corn or enllus.| few drops whenev: It is the ‘most marvelous) i known. i. N. Forman We] Will Teach You the Shortest Way | to a Good ition se : ~; NORTHWESTERN BUSINESS fe! COLLEGE ain, yy And | Northwestern Sh. eed, money- | only UTS) shorthand at any drug emesh Corns Simply Our frame with fatty tissue smears, | Une and then, lin the face and r How gets the younger generation e fresh! —War Savings Stamps for Sale Here— Tailored Ready Co. The woe of eating. Surely, this were vain, A moment's pleasure, followed close by pain, | If food diges Are we not again 4s and ust it rem 1 clean, leavin not, and if it digent,|%* Am . your ‘palm, The woe of love. Abasement of ta bute trifle man, tured by E. Lawrence | Bookkeeping i Enslavement for his briefly mortal ra lod tile at the Owl Drug 401-403 PIKE STREET