The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 26, 1918, Page 10

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ssramceneninsaaiattiasttaniasibivaimnnnmii tC NT LN i i ; U.-W, MAN WINS WAR CROSS IN AERO BATTLE First Licut, Phil Henderson, ob: server in the 12th aero squadron of the United Stat fore in France, has been awa i the Di tinguished Service cross by Gen Vershing Henderson attended the Unive sity of V f four yea and has doz f tric n se au He was Coach Gilmour Do bie’s “property man” one year, wa & member of the football quad, and served as laboratory instructor in the college c He was a member of Thet. fra ternity and Tyes sophomore society. Henderson's citation, made public at Washington, D.C rday says: “Henderson was extrao! heroism in sector, ‘Trance, August 25. While on an unpro' 4 reconnaissance | mission with ut. Edward Orr pilot, he encountered a patrol of eight enemy pursuit planes, near the American balloon lines. When Lieut. Orr attacked the plane which had dived at the American balloon, Lieut. Henderson engaged the other eight enemy machines which were attacking from the rear, In the violent battle follow ing all nine of the enemy were iriven off.” Henderson's father is A. G. Hen derson, who ts stationed at the Unit ed States fish hatcheries at Kalama, Wash. TECHNIQUE OF U.S. ARMY GO0D PARIS, Oct. 26.—The correspoge! ent of the Echo de Paris wrote of a visit to American headquarters dur ing the drive: “I was amazed at the remarkable care taken by American staff offi cers to assure during battle a per fect liasion between the advancing troops and the staffs of command in the rear. The ground they had to cover was unknown to officers and men, for it had been under the German heel four years. Yet the Americans had drawn mapa with Meticulous care and by the use of colors indicated every contour of the ground, streams, woods, Sulleys, houses, thickets. The maps were wonderfully made. The Ameri. cans first found out what they had wo do—and then they aa Gottstein Smiles at Crowd Before ridges, With an air of amused unconcern William Gottstein smiled at the crowd of curious spectators that gathered Friday afternoon in Judge Jurey's court room to witness his arraignment on the charge of killing John Murray near Des Moines on Cetober 4. The nervous manner in which he rocked his chair, however, showed that he was not as much at cave as his debonair attitude seemed to indicate. When the case was called Attor- ney Walter B. Allen, for the de fense, waived the right of the ac- cused to hear the information against him read, and a plea of “not guilty” was made. Gottstein was handed a copy of the complaint and flopped heavily into his chair. HIMSELF The average man keeps posted On conditions, war and monary: Amd knows far less about him- nelt— | ‘Though truce, it may sound) fanny. H Some men do Iack the confidence themselves for much success; with self be needs acquaintance— "Twill help him more or less, + ] How’s This for a Boy’s Bike? Model 51-T, with bell, frame pump, tools and bag, stand, drop side guides, guards and electric light system built in, not hung on. Mercer Cycle Co. “The Bicycle House” 1110-12 Pike, Elliott 1150 LIBERTY BONDS MUNICIPAL AND CORPORATION BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD JOHN E. PRICE & CO. Ninth Floor Hoge Building || town. lot the. BY J. Really, TAKING DIS FROM | | DISABILITY THE SEATTLE STAR “Over There” With the Yanks BURLESON IS GROVE x == = / it's a nanny nabber to labor all day learning to count to five, and then have some littl: French kid, right is your face and bounce o ball, wh counting 0 wardly talk, loud up to 4417 Here's Uncle Sam's Plan for the Cure, Re-Education and BY GERTRUDE R. STEIN | Secretary of the American Red Cross | Institute for Crippled and Disabled Men. “What's going to become of the men who come back minus arma, legs, of eyes—hopelensly crippled?” —says the pessimist, as he watches the troop train, crowded with laugh- ing boys, roll away toward the bat tlefront. Cheer up, Mr. Pessimist—-“there ain't goin’ to be no leavin's"—no hopeless or helpless crippled vet erans—of THIS war! Not after Uncle Sam gets thru with the wounded men temporarily disabled After battlescarred Yank, home from war, has gone thru the loving. skiliful hands of his Uncle Sam, and enjoyed all the care and comfort and training that money can buy or mind devise—he ix going to be a citizen so happy and useful he'll never no- | thee the absence of the arm or leg jor eye he GAVE—not lost—for his country! To show the practical working of the plan, let us suppose that John Brown, the son of our nextdoor neighbor, went over the top, and becaea tate with G fren hetares—Sut | without his arm. After John leaves French or American base hospital where he is sent to America and goes once to the reconstruction hosp! | located In the city nearest his home There will be 16 of these re construction hospitals in eac 16 districts into which the nation was divided for draft registra tion purposes. The Ried hospit Baltimore is already in operation |and the others are being planned and built rapidly, For men dis abled by gas or incipient tubercu losis there will be a large open-air | hospital at Asheville, N. C John goes to the reconstruction hospital, and there, while he recovers |his strength, he receives his first lessons in occupational therapy that is, the training in the use of muscles and physical powers which will enable him to earn a living and help himself with the aid of the missing arm. In the reconstruction hospitals there are classes in type writing, printing, weaving, and pot tery making and many }arts and crafts and clerical ovcupa tions As soon as his health | pletely restored and he pretty well how to make one arm do the work of two, John goes to Washington and looks up Charles Allen Prosser, director of the feders board for vocational education. is Mr. Prosser’s business to he gets immediate treatment at ia com It help Many Employment of Every American Soldier Disabled } in the Fight for World Freedom. Entering His Plea’ industrial | has learned | THE FARMER MUST HAVE RUGGED HEALTH Break Downs Due to Exposure { { [John find the job he likes bent and can do best—and help hin prepare | UP. to fill 1. Before he enlisted John| Hritish papers make no effort to was a builder—a carpenter. He al-|conceal their concern over the re ways wanted to study architecture—/@uction In Mrjtish merchant ton. | [but couldn't afford it. Here's his|mage, altho they take at full face chance. The architect is not serious | Value the assurances from Ame ly handicapped by the lack of one arm. Mr. Prosser sends John to a technical school of where the government pays all hin | expenses for the course. At the end of his training John is equipped to earn more money than ever before. | Now—where is he to get a job? | But Uncle Sam isn't content with | |} preparing John to GET a job—the United States department of labor bureau of employment finds him a job But that’s not all. There's wartisk insurance be aides. Instead of paying the Ainabled | soldier a monthly lump sum of} money, the warrisk insurance idea in to pay the disabled man a regular | sum determined by legree of hia| disability Thus—the tan who loses one hand, or has a slight Pp or 4 partial paralysis which does not incapacitate him—is paid less thar the man who has lost his sight, or bo cs or arma, or has some ner foun dina which renders bir practically helpless. Those who ar able to re ° civMian occupa will receiv regular money | com roporgen to their BLAMED FOR POOR SERVICE rl wtmaster General char Burleson of being chiefly responsible for the alleged diserim ination against union members in co of the telegraph and Citizen” to T Star f that steps for bis removal be t Und upervinion,” the let t operat have been suf fering from his 1 al prejudice arly yt tolegra phers and experior mechanic who have been out of employment for a period of six months, are marking time, waiting for’ Burte wont ndescend to reinstate them, Still, he full toll for you nat © are recely I think it high time that Burle non either be forced to ¢ rvice in the graph telephone bust a m M 1 head of the great railway ny f the United States, ha wn his farsighted by not trying yes under ht howing any reanized labo: graph and telephone systems, can only antagont the men under him, and eventually, the public at We have only to look bacitl working conditions under mail carriers have been for a number of years tute 1 real what to ervice. The employ t ' hat Mr. i nie for the t work of any skilled labor Why, they even raised the prices our room, in fact every wages,” ts an excerpt le eived by m operator, nix 99 per week every oper » bought one or me Liber nda, 1 War Savings Stamps, Let them give us girls a living wag HUNS TRYING TO DIVIDE ALLIES LONDON, Oct Now that the Riritiah stand. {not co: ete) has been turned out, Hritist ern unite in the and that merchant shipbuilding speeded ca that the allies will get full bene | fit from m pooling of tonnage after | |the war The Germans are seizing on the situation in an effort to create din | cord and fears among the allies, but like the rest of the clumsy German efforta, German airmen have been fur ninhed with leaflets to drop British and French lines, wh about the “triumph of Ameri: Briti#h overseas trade and shipping” and make pea » with the Germans America only in tetarested 4 ir continuing the war Fools County’s Bloodhounds by Changing Shoes |: Charged with ting a bur glary at the K An escaped er T r r Thom roke some nd to ane R. A. Thomas, a fail to frighten the British. | urge the British and French tof ‘ To Safeguard Our Customers gainst Influenza 1—Uncarpeted aisles, passageways, stairways, floors germicide solution every vator and strong toilet ele- with a The are mopped night. elevator shafts are fumigated each night. 2—Our carpete d departments and aisles are thoroughly gone over with the vacuum clean- ers every 3—The Bargain Basement is comple night. sly ventilat- ed with brand new washing, heating and air- changing equipment. 4—Our Food Departments, including Cafe, Soda Fountains and Lunch Counters, taken, and, ¢ if course, have always continue to take, the most scrupulous pains to sterilize with plenty of soap and glassware hot between services. the dishes and Our employes water of these departments and the elevator opera- tors wear gauze masks. §—Our Children’s 3arber Shop and Marinello Hair Dressing Shop operatives wear gauze masks. duct Both tained at a very the high degree of sanitary con- se departments are main- 6—All windows are kept open during business hours, when harmful drafts will not result from having them open to the air. 7—Every emplo) symptoms of visiting are out sick, who develops the slightest influenza nurses, with an automobile, are main- tained for the benefit of our is sent home, and employes who 8—The in charge, is that no on the ource of 3on Marche Clinic danger or illness with a trained nurse minute to see is left un- attended or unconsidered. 9—Every telephone mouthpiece in The Bon Marche is sterilized every morning. 10—In the Infants’ department there is a trained nurse, expectant mothers. busy protect their families 11—We are tise special “Circus” lieve in good values not adve ertising who is at the service of all mothers and She is kept particularly at this time advising mothers how to from influenza. and never do adver- bargain sales. We be- all the time. Bargain crowds are to be avoided at the request of Dr. McBride. 12—Our service executives have to guard against congestion in our store. ask you to co-operate by shopping early been requested We in the day, or in the less crowded departments, At the request of Dr. McBride, we have re- moved all chairs and seats from our réstroom, except at the desks. 13—We are knowledge co-operating to the best of our and the limit of our ability—with all the health and government officials to help control the epidemic. 14—We think you are as can possibly safe in this store as we make you. GERMANY TRIES TO TRICK US AS SHE DID RUSSIANS, SAYS WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD President BY WI AM G, SHEPHERD WASHINGTON, D, C., 25. This looks like Germany's Brest wak trick, all over again The German answer that Prince represents the German similar to an an 8 given the Russians vent to I ovak. wain at the time, and rman 0 to Wilson a At es of the Rugsian face t they he door in the stockade fer to that i to the y d where the ernment , | hounds ore «kept, he wa abl ing work | make nie away Before loge were unloosed to hunt Vincent Roberts |down, be changed his shoes for Weds French Girl | (re ee ee ane YAKIMA, Oct 26. Word enjoyed hia freedom for a m reached here from Vrance of efore waa cought marriage of Attorney J. Vincent Rob The escape was reported to the|# erts, of this city, to Miss Jean Rose| guards by P. L. Austin, who was| Elizabeth Mangin, a Frer | serving Oday ser » for prac Roberta w mber of the engi Iu ing tletry withou a Hoenne sering corps ich left here for| overseas four months ago. He tn a graduate of the University of Wash ington ITALIAN PROFITEERING IN U. S. SHOES STOPPED (Special to The Star by N. FB. A) PARIS, Oct. 26.—Because of profite@ring by Italian shoe dealers American boota and shoes are to be sold direct by the manufacturers | to the public in Italy. Shoes origin ally sold at $5 a pair have been advan to $20 nd $25 by the| | dealers | and Failures| and Hard Work\ agers called on Mayor He Has Plan to Capture Crooks Up at 649 New York block, they are displaying new invention which puts men into jail. It's J M. Cody's’ burglar alarm whic you thieves are on the even before they raise h te front poreh 4 window or open a door, Then you can pick up the phone at the side of your bed, dl without even leaving the warmth of the blankets, summon the police to your home. As you fall back into slumber, the police handcuff the prowlers on your porch Shipyard Workers Back Car Purchase Shipyard workers and yard man Har Fri menser Thin message Russian » Russians » will we sentatives of the I the earmarks question that Wilson ation was tussian qu we go to F me been The that has Wilson f the Russian asked Germany the asked. t-Litowsk to talk there the real entatives of the German peo- | newer was exactly the same given Germans Brest-Litoveak the representa 10 face, at the p jerman peo ORIES OF DEMOCRATIZING pers papers of today f the democratizing changes Interviews erman #0 going on with year ago was taken government by The Russian the American were ore just like in Germany Scheidemann, the ¢ and with other ¢ liberals, were n censors into Russia Russian newspaper were just as full of Ger- MANY RIFE IN RUSSIA to the different newspa news: flooded with | pTMAN #0 sent past the to W. G. SHEPHERD ed nobody but | Between the German pr | Russian people the German had erected a steel wall of militar jists. There the militarists were at Brest-Litovsk, haughty, insulting. cruel, just as we should have found them at the peace table, down with them the German kaiser ople and the many's democratization as the! Ame ans who were in Russia in American papers are today those days and who followed the When I came out of Russia, later, | Gorman knavery thru to its finish and discovered that the kaiser was] cannot be fooled twice. We heard still in full power and that the mill-| tii, German -peace song sung once tary leaders still ruled over the lives |; death 40 fate fo 1 satinies of the German people. e 8 | day, to pledge their allegiance to the t " o the iy n who was in Rus Catarrh in Some of Its Many Forms |ctty’s taking over the traction sye-| 2° eek sila warns ox Claims Thousands | tem all’ thought then f Together with the mayor they| se Russian papers and Every farm family has tts ine cabinet and in| went over countants’ reports, | ron Tendins Lapelsrspon — eet and &lmost every one will be found tle of Dr. Hartman's | showing the actual value of th piracy Bend aera CA Sarva antian. B'ox colds and ontarrh | tent te he fe eee Yarce of the sys-| partor talk, thatthe common people it is invaluable. Its use in indicated in all cases of |smrcels of real flee an GMRONON Dee Wen Se, Cent catarrhal inflammation and congestion, whether of re Tecate t Canad sadiaelow today ratory organs, stomach, bowels or other organs of th ir gy Mee _ Biase ig ay oes ther organs of the| TOWN IS PUNISHED und the newspaper reports I read Mr. W. J. Temple ‘of 300 Lincoln Ave., Delay On ‘ even the official statements from A A laware, Ohio, suffered for} years with inflammation of the muc linings of the stomach and] ¢ FOR SINGLE CHEER | serman; rg gyn < yar eguypnbigd bowels, According. to his own story he did not eat a meal for five years| i ply ™ nN ha A) kalaer but that pury et to come without distress. He says: “I am | : T ahie aertine birch ak batden ie aati oe a farmer and must be exposed to| Peruna is wold everywhere. You|cseared from Liege says the entire | man masses, br ck to my mind aii kinds of weather, After yeara|may buy it in either lquid or tab.|fown wan punished recently heoause|all those days in Tussia when the A wea, GAME, Socom 108 foe. Ask ‘tor Dr iat mon shoutec ive la France| Russian people thought the day ye ire Wel tkaoae Patten a i¢|2* German soldiers passed thru the| peace and fair play had come again |five hotties and am well you are weeking health take nothing it Aa ath ee eee oP RUSSIAN DELEGATES | Formerly, I could not do a day's |¢lse. Insist upon Peruni guished at 7 pm, all theatres wer | WERE MILITARIA work. Now, farm work does not| If you sick suffering, | ciosed and cafes were shut up at| The Russian government sent fatigue me in the least. Peruna is|write The Peruna Dept.|3 p,m ps Aer tes to Brest-Litovsk. ‘These the best medicine and tonic on the |77, Columbus, Ohio, for Dr, Hart f tos expected to pt socialintss iver ile 9 cat A strengthens my | man'e Health Book. The book | British have captured German|and democrats and men who could i mination for tt “especially for |free and may help you. Awk your] gun that has already fired itv 460th! speak for the German pe In atarrh and colds. ldealer for a Peruna Almanac shell against the Huns ad, they met men who went hearing the same strains again, here in our own United States; the same flood of newspaper cables about domocratizing changes In Germany the same talks by Maximilian Har den and Scheidemann and the Ger man socialists, the same silence from the kaiser and Hindenburg and Lu dendorff and the other masters of | slaughter. We saw it all in Russia and here we're seeing it again, It is more subtle here, because the Ger man, having played it once in Rus sia, finds it possible to play it even more subtly the second time “Men representing the German people will come to the peace table Germany tells us IT LOOKS LIKE THE SAME LI THAT WAS TOLD RUSSIA RUSSIA HAS SHOWN HOW | NOT TO DE WITH GERMANY If we had gone to the peace table at this time there is every chance that we would have found the Ger man militarists there; a steel wall | between us and the German people, kaiser | had we sat | | whom we are trying to reach, with our peace-forever plan The kaiser and hi¢ six sons, Lu dendorff and Hindenburg, and a | whole flock of those German pro fessors who re y into » IN ies must have the keys to the ¢ and American Fre Briti Italian, Serbian Belgian and other allied soldiers must guard these cells, to see that no word goes from them td the pea table, before we even dare say that | we will sit down at a peace table | Russia tried to blaze the trail for jus in peace talk with Germany. She has shown us what NOT to She. Doesn’t Want _ a Pro-Hun Husband ‘That her husband is a pro-German | who tells her that the “fatherland will soon whip Americ and that “america is all a bluff,” is the | ground on which na Dombrowski | has filed a divorce complaint in the | superior court against B, F. Dom browski. They were married in | Ka nsas in 1916. \Big Car Ferry Is. Is Coming Thru Canal VANCOUVER, RB, C., Oct, 26.—The Canadian Northern car ferry Canora built at Laurzon, Quebec, and launch ed on June 10, is on its way to Van couver, via the Panama canal. The | big car carrier will ¢ between } Port Mann and Van island. | 16,441 HAVE DIED OF FLU | HARRISBURG, Oct, 26.—From 27 counties, a total of 7 influenza | ease are reported within the last 24 hours. Total deaths from influenza since October 1 are 16,441, and from pnew monia, 6,281 |Women who are Icsing 68 | need the healthful effects of ~—— Beechans Thouugiess racterizes ——s«~P ills Sale of Any Medicine in the World F REE DOCTOR Ex-Government Physt believe, what NOT to do. Had we sat at a peace table with Germany now we may have been fol- lowing Russia's route to defeat, by deceit and intrigue. The biggest Russia, then, ts this; t let anybody talk peace in your ring, Don't let anybody even debate peace, Germany expects her friends here inf the United States to do as they did in Russia; to spread the peace hope President Wilson in his note was talking to the German people, not to the American people. He couldn't talk to both peoples at the same time in the same note. He raised the hope of peace in the mind of the German people: he didn't intend or wish to raise the hope of peace in our minds, It’s OUR job to fight on. St. Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co Firebacka, Baings and repairs for all kinds of stoves ranges and | fur- naces. Water backs and coils put in and connected. 608 PIKE ST. Main 875 “De REGISTERED DENTISTS Out of the high rent district, per I service and er ads mable me to a you Go to any ntist, get = p> then come to me and get 26 per cent ont from his figure, with Careful, painiess methods and per sonal attention, Dr. J. Brown's New Office ORPTHEUM BULLDING ‘Third and Madison ess our methods tion, ‘and our pi » accorded every cours ene with sound busl- ness judgment 4% ings Accounts to Check Are Invited Accounts Subject Cordially Peoples Sevlhes Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST thing I learned in|

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