The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 1, 1918, Page 5

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g & t ; & : M \ J i & 3 |! ti HE > “ 4 . a * , a - i. i! bs : i i! 3) St a | a - tat ii il Sle 5 8S . it. "Ilo = #4 . | CY 5 1 HH 5 1 a | ij 6 NON - PARTISAN SUPREME East Harrisen St—Fire Station Ne. 7. 1 ii " 2 a * 33 a E33 4 = =] a 3! : 4 é ' ° i. “ = df a #2 >| s rn > 83 a i “3 4 : ce | +2 . | 4 Py 2a BY 32 Gin «Bh =: id : ae) . ee te a Ea iB # S0x ‘ nf | / ag | cue ee Skrtg £25*0 oe set | £ H N. E—Fire Sta rd and Greenwood Ave.—Fire Station No. 31. 3. le (reduced) » i < a; % iis, é sac North Seventy 32. certify that the above Justice and Constable Candidates change tive, n, hereby OR VOTING FOR PERS THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY REFUGEES MAN FLAYS UNDERTAKER SHOE FACTORY (Apecial to The Star by N. 1B. A) PARIS, France, Nov, L--Part of the money Americans have given the Red Crow has financed a factory at Limoges, where shoes for the chil dren of all the Belgian refugee colo nies in France are made. It is also planned to turn out linen and other clothing for refugees, All the work is being done by refugees, thus n & chance to earn thelr own living by making clothes and for themselven. be necessity for the factory apparent when many pairs of boug' from existing factories worn out by Belgian children ven days. of the Ball’ Let Stuart's Calcium Wafers Drive Away Pimples and Skin Erup- tions and Give You a Com- plexion That Is # Mar- vel of Beauty. ‘Triat a Fre Nature decreed that every woman should have # clear, amovth, deli- cate skin. If it is blotehed with pimples, blackheads and other such eruptions, it ia simply an evidence that the skin lacks certain elements that promote and preserve skin health. And the greatest of these is the wonderful calcium aw Oe is Stuart's Calcium Wafers, It in one of the natural constitud@ts of the human body. Your skin must have it to be healthy, It enriches the blood, invigorates the #kin heal dries up the pim: botla, sexe and blotches, enables new akin of fine texture to form become clea nkish, amooth refined to point and beauty » use thene wonder- ful wafers means to become the belle of the ball Stop usin creams, lotion owders Dleachea, which merely hide for t moment. Get a 50-cent box of Stu- lart's Calclum Wafers at any drug men, store today. And if you wish to trial, send the coupon 1 them a AS WAR “In all that has been done in the way of profiteering in this country, thing be conceived that ts re wicked and false than an at tempt to impose on the grief-#tricken | relatives of dead soldiers and sailors, and {t seems to me that in this ease the shabbiest wort of fraud has been perpetrated, both on th ernment and on the relatives of the deceased boys." | ‘This was the condemnation voloed rR. W. Me uring the jn ean \n Clelland Thurw evidence against G. M, Butterworth, undertak accused of de frauding the relatives of dead sailors jby charging them for additic burial expenses, altho the govern ment had contracted with him for jee to the extent of $100. ‘The defendant was bound over to the grand jury on a $2,000 bond Anuistant U. & District Attorney | Ren L. Moore conducted the prone ution, and the defendant was repre- | sented by Attorneys Wilmon Tucker and G, W. Gregory Tells of Telegrams Stephen M. Fowler, a | Union clerk | tor T. F. Witch gave evidence to the effect that the firm had sent tele grams to bereaved relatives in other states informing them that decent burial in hermetically sealed caskets would be provided for a payment of $200, , Fitch said that he called on G. M Butterworth and asked him if he did not think that these telegrams were misleading, and that th | would give the relatives the impre sion that the government was not paying for hermetically sealed cas kets, Butterworth's reply Wenstern “——~~ SHINGTON STATE dic 182; wounded ¥ morning's list is divided cident, 1; missing in ac fh Killed in aetion, sndetermined, wounded rthweat and follow DIED OF WOUNDS and Postoftice Inspec: | was, | Total American Army ecident and other enuses i oe x * CASUALTIE 5 a { «ut { B08 140 & died of PROFITEER | You, T can seo that now." | | | James D. Reagan, of Michmond Keach, Wash, testified that on the| death of his wor, a sailor at the naval training station, he was notl “1 by Butterworth to come in and| k out a nice casket, and that th defendant said to him, “The govern | meht only supplies a cheap coffin that would not be suitable for a boy | like yours.” He gave a note for| $185 to pay the difference on the casket that he chore, The defense argued that the rela tives mentioned in the simply paying for a better casket than the government tract provided for, and that case con there was nothing in the contract to pr vent Butterworth from charging for | this additional vice. Flays Defendant | “It ts not the purpose of the Amer {ean government,” said Commis sioner McClelland, to take a man’s life and then send him back like a dead pig to his grieving relati there was no thought that the rela tives would be required to fork up if they wanted a decent burial for their boys. It looks as if the de fendant has been attempting to profiteer on the grief and sorrow of the relatives, trying to make them think that the government throws the boys aside without giving them proper burial. “I don’t know what the jury or what any other court will think about this matter; but I believe that 1 am making Judicial deduction from the evidence when I my that it waa the intention of the defendant to take what he could get out of the government and out of the relatives of the deceased sailors.” Date Casualties to 3 casualties Thursday ‘# list in divided as fol- 120. Died of wounds, 6; died Inenae, 17; wounded severely, 113; tion, a1 | state casualties, including two Washington ILLED IN ACTION Next of Kin. -De Dunn MOVE ITALIANS INTO | Germans, cart understand why the! all CENTRAL PUBLIC ARKET Open 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Saturday The dealers of the Central Public Mar- ket, in co-operation with the City Health Department, will omit the usual adver- tisement this week. American Grocery Stores Company Help Yourself Branch Central Public Market Central Branch Central Public Market Seattle Branch Seattle Market, 109 Occidental Desires to do everything within its power to in every way co-operate with the City Health Department. We ask our customers to shop as early as pos- sible in order to avoid all crowding and congestion. |DUNKIRK NO LONGER PATH OF OWN BOMBS; “BIG BERTHA” TARGET @pecial to The Star by N. E. A) | (Special to The Star by N. B.A) PARIS, Nov. 1. — Austrians, like) PARIS, Nov. 1—Dunkirk, up sent sag eae 'be “Tabatha” aie té bona the Belgian border, ts just now outed Private Wm. IH. Netcher +.++Trenton, Utah....Mra. C FF. Netcher ¥. A. Steart Co, 712 Stuart Bidg., Marshall, Mich. Send me, at ones, by return mall, a free trial package of Stuart's Calcium Wafers, Name Street city GET AFTER THAT COLD RIGHT NOW Got right after it with a bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery Corp. Frea Ti. Desoto .. Corp. Frank J. Moore . Wagoner Abel M. Sprague Private Wm. T. Harding te Leandrew M. Hill . wounp Prannin & Woodard Edward Sea te Sherman } J ED SECTIO: | Name— Private ries W. Rennett.. . Private ‘1 J. Kimmede oe Private Darrell C. Mitchel! WOUNDED lcorp. Walter J. Green . Hugler Max Goldstaub Private Frank Goneling Private Frank L. Dolan Private William Hansen Private John Sinner . Private iryin Stoop . WOUNDED—DEGREE + Salt Lake ¢ DIED OF DISEASE SEVERELY +» Winters, Cal. Mra. Una Adams Portland, Or..Mra. Minnie Goldstaub Watsonville, Cal. ...J. T. W. Delong Portiand, Or......Steven J. Eyerley Collingston, Utah...,Willis Hansen cities behind the lines. When Italian | Teach of Hun long-range guna, “Big airmen bombed railroad stations in| Berthas” have been bombing Austria, Austrian authorities locked kirk, shells falling many days at several hundred Italian prisoners of | minute intervals. Bat the city war in engine houses and repair|on with its daily routine, Not shops. They hoped to make Italian the tramway schedule was prisoners victims of their country-|/ed. The Germans are driven men’s bombs—or else keep the bomb- reach ers away. UNDETERMINED Freeno, Cal + Mra. Emma Verley | Lewiston, Idaho Mra, Frank J. Moore Van Anda, Mont.....Mra. G, Spr y... Mra. Alice Harding We itzi ombd, b.... Richard E. Hill 1GuTL ver, Colo. Mrs. L. E. Woodard Hbran, Col. Mra. Grace Fitzpatrick Colo... Jacob Bohnet alt Lake City Mra. Elizabeth Jones ‘ort Ludiow, Wash. Mra. G. Mcliroy Fresno, Cal........Mre. Dora Wolfe N NO. 2 Wh st i now to where they do not city. Addres' Next of Kin. Oakland, Cal Mra Emily F. Bennett Denver, Col..Mra. Mary T. Kimmede San Joaquin, Cal......John Mitchell Fromberg, Mont Whitefish, Mont . George Siar 1. H. Stoop |by a lack of sulphur in the hair. | which A THRIFT STAMP a day will keep the Hun aw LOWEST RATES TO CALIFORNIA * SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES | SAN DIEGO | FREE DOCTOR Go to the | RIGHT DRUG CO. 169 Washington 8t. and 1111 First Ave. REGISTERED DENTISTS the high rent district, per- jee and moderate advertis- Good osrriss lore | pooms ‘unsurpassed meals. venience for passengers. yc pins ff sonal ' einen and Dr. J. Brown’s New Office THE M’CORMICK LINE | 109 Cherry St. Phone Fillott 3436 | ORPHEUM BUILDING ‘Third and Madison fhe never let a cough or cold or| Private Edgar 8 Vandyne - +-Ukiah, Cal. William Vandyne case of grippe go Until it grew dan. | Private Henry Em Portland, Or ‘s, Amelia Monsen eo! 1 gerous, She just nipped it when ah ease Sei Sinaite . . Milas Irene Brown began to mniffle or cough before it | private Robert W. Thom developed seriously. | Private Russell C. Turnbaugh.. Men, women, and children of ev-| ery age have used this preparation for fifty years as a prompt reliever. | All ages are using it today because | of its positive remults. | Generous size bottles sold every. | where. . Idaho vale, Idaho... Robert M. Thomas Walter Turnbaugh Japanese Farmers Perform Wonders BY BURTON KNISELY (Copyright, 1918, by Newspaper Enterprise Association) NAGOYA, Japan, Nov. Hn + Mi Constipation Corrected | Dr. King's New Life Pills tonight mean clean bowels, a clear head, | clear thinking, a day well begun in| | anese love passionately, keeping |fruitiess cherry trees and peach | trees fruitless for the sake of them. he morning, good digestion, ck y ing skin, Ald in action but wure| dapan is smaller than Montana. 'HUNS REFUSE TO WORK Mm » At dru 01 ve ere ¥ coywneres | SESE) Iu Montana. There aro ctowe to | WITH WAR OBJECTORS) | , 000, je in : | to The Star by N. FE. A) INDON, Nov. L.A party of Ger | man war prisoners sent to work at a camp in the west of England went on strike on ascertatming that a number of conscientious objectors were to be 15 pan, PER CENT OF OF JAPAN I ONLY | THE LA s | CULTIVATED, Less than 15 per cent CAN be cultivated if the arable mountain sides aro gentle, used. aioe If your little one is out-of-sorts, | well, playful child ‘ 4 pias anes employed on the same job. They ee eee GRAY HAIR NOW. YET ON THIS 15 PER CENT OF | stated they had a 9 Wf ey. |half-sick, isn’t resting, eating and| Mothers can rest easy after giving THE AREA OF MONTANA THE | section” to working next to men who cs naturally—look, Mother! see | this harmless “fruit laxative,” be Witshhnseit Scat peceiet ni ov eee FARMER RAISES wore too cowardly to fight for their |!f tongue is coated. This is a sure cause it never fails to cleanse the de pte Mage vee ev-| EACH YEAR MORE FOOD THAN | own country sign that its little stomach, liver and |little one’s liver and bowels ané sa , Bed se eet |The 000,000 JAPANESE PEO : eit _|bowels are clogged with waste. |sweeten the stomach and they dear ulphur rio AT. ore eat H . | When cross, irritable, feverish, ly love its pleasant taste. Full dé Tah Japan in 1917 exported $24,000, ime rin S 0 stomach sour, breath bad or has |rections for babies, children of all # ate that loses, ite color and | worth of raw food and $28,000, ~ | stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, ages, and for grown-ups printed on - . aces, orth of prepared food. In the | : “ fc pe era,’ dull an Ufsldes, te caueea |e prep fell. ot cold, give a teaspoonful of |bottle. Remember name—"Calé same year she imported only $7,000,- | A d H H % prepared food—an excess of $37,000,- | Piaiadtc 000 of food exports Our grandmother made up a mix- ture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to As the Pass the Coming of keep her locks dark and beaut!-| ry ' | here are 5,400,000 families, or » ful, and thousands of wonten and! 39,990,000 farm people, who on aby Draws Nenrer—Are men who value that even color,| 15,000,000 acres of land—half an| pared that beautiful dark shade of hair is so attractive, this old-time recipe. Nowadays we get this famous , mixture {mproved by the addition | Rent Half of Yield of other ingredients by asking at | More than half of Japan's | No woman awaiting the Joy of any drug store for a bottle of | farmers are tenants, Saye te case gion Riv ‘istae ae “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Com-| ‘The tenants pay more than halt | wonderful penetrating application, ound,” which darkens the hair| the yield of their fields in rent. A other's Friend. $0 naturally, so evenly that no-| most half the farmers have sub heey y jto regular wee throughout the body can possibly tell it has been | sidiary occupations, such as silk in-)the coming event, and strain and applied Yoy just dampen a dustry and tea picking. Almost one-| tension ix reliowed. It renders the sponge or soft brush with it and/ fifth of the farmers’ families are in | Broad, flat abgominai muscles pliant, ooow this through your hair, tak Gove The rate of interest on these | mand for expansion As a result ing one small strand at a time,|debts is usually 10 per cent and By morning the gray hair disap-| over, and often over 15 per cent. acre per head and Jess than three | acres per family—raise more food | than 55,000,000 people eat. | use only No woman awaiting the joy of | the nerves are not drawn upon with that peculiar wrenching |and nausea, nervousness, pears; but whet delights the Ia And-—naturally in this great con mn and” stretching pein are es with Wyet!'s Sage and Sul-| trast to the American land of plenty, | nteracted The abdomen ex- | al phur Compound is that, besides |a land where there 4s little furniture da castiy when baby arrives, and | beautifully darkening the hair after and less housework, the women | seein and Geagen aa w conse a few applications, it also brings | work in the fields with the men Bilious! Look at Tongue. No matter what ails your child, a}a few hours all the constipated pot ays be the first treagment given Store Close Child is Constipated! Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons from little stomach, liver and bowels with “California Syrup of Figs.” son, undigested food and sour bilt gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a thorough laxative should al rnia Syrup of Figs,” and in fornia. ALL DAY SATURDAY At the request of the City Health Authorities our store will be closed all day Saturday. Shopping hours for next week will be announced later. back the gloss and lustre and| Cultivation is done almost wholly Friend not only allays gives it an appearance of abund-|by human labor, and with rude im in aayancn but enmares a ance, |plements. The use of night soil, or |Win ta Kept woft and smooth and natural, and free from disfig- Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com.-| human waste, as practically the ex urement. | Bradfield Rernulator | pound is a delightful toilet req-|clusive fertilizer, gives. the farming Write to the uisite to impart color and aja character peculiarly, distasteful to) @ompany, Dept. J, Lamar Building, youthful appearance to the hair.jan American observer. Atlanta, Ga, for their Motherhood Rook, and procure a bottle of Moth- eres riend from the drureist Tt js just os standard as anything you| think of it is not intended for the cure,| The grounds of the homes are neat mitigation or prevention of dis-|and shaded with trees and bushes east and flowers, These flowers the Jap- | Spelgce &.

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