The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 7, 1918, Page 5

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THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, NOVI (BER 7, 1918 ~ No Luck for Him SWIM CANAL ~ IN LIFEBELTS TOCGET AT HUN This child won’t play or smile. He is real sick. His tongue is white, breath feverish, stomach sour. He fears he is in for a dose of awful castor oil, cal- omel or pills. How he hates them. He would rather remain sick, No! He won't tell mother! (pecial to The Star b B. A.) LONDON, Noy, 7~-How does an| If his mother would only learn the value of candy nog ct eg we A army foree itt way over @ canal or a river? The story of how a British pany negotiated the canal between Passchendaele and St, Quentin moat vividly reveals the manner and the difficulties overcome Refore going into Midlanders had been practiced swimming in lifebelts, in Somme. “Cascarets."" How children love this candy cathartic—how surely it acts on liver and bowels, in morning of the attack up thru the amoky they came mist and threw places in shallow, in others full of water and in spots waist deep thick mud. At another point it din appears Into a dark tunnel. Stretch a Line leads attached to threw across to the further bank by swimming. ‘These light lines were used to draw over heavier ropes by which the men lines which they who could not avin crossed hand over hand Roth ends of the tunnel were seized in the surprise attack and a howitzer was fired down one end. The noise echoed and reechoed and out from the further end came 4 stream of Germans, like burrowing antmals out of a hole, until 1,000 | Prisoners had been taken, a quarter Cuts Mine Loose Each ten cent box of Cascarets contains | A corporal determined to take a | bridge guarded on the end near him by machine guns and swept from the other end by machine gun fire |In a hand-to-hand fight he over joame the first pair of machine gun ners, then ran the gauntlet of bul | leta from the other side and found | three German engineers prepared to |destroy the structure. He felled |them and cut the mine loone so | that it dropped into the river with: |out damage to the bridge. PULLMAN WILL HAVE NEW Y. M. C. A. HOME PULLMAN, Wash, Nov. 7—-A $12,000 Y. M. C. A. buliding ts to be given to the soldier students of the two branches of the 8. A. T. C. The | college is to grant the site. Doctor Praises Eczema Remedy eure of TO MOTHERS! full directions for dose for children aged one year old and upwards. Nothing else ‘works’? the nasty bile, sour fermentations and constipation poison from the tender little bowels so gently, yet so thoroughly. Even cross, feverish, bilious children gladly take Cascarets without being coaxed. Cascarets taste just like candy. Cascarets never gripe, Aever sicken, never injure, but above all, they never disappoint the worried mother. ‘ Gray Hair || The Kosine Treatment for -Adler-i-ka | from this nervous disease. The Kosine Treatment reliev: all fear of the attacks so frequent in psy or tite, We want the most skeptical to try Koain for the success of the treatmen in the past has proved it to be of unusual merit. y will giving complete dietary, ete, free on request. SWIFT'S PHARMACY Second Ave. and Pihe ‘Ailerka is the only medicine for gas on the stomach. I never had eo much relief with any medicine. I take $25.00 for the relief Lady Druggist’s Advice Taken “My sisteriniaw is a druggist She told me of severai bad stomach and liver cases which were bene- |fited by taking Mayr’s Wonderful I had numerous bad attacks due to | bioating and had almost constant | your remedy. I am feeling fine now.” It is a simple, harmless prep- |aration that removes the catarrhal | mucus from the intestinal tract and lallays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal aliments, including appendicitian. One dose will convince or money refunded. Owl Drug Co., Bartell'’s 6 Drug Stores and drug gints everywhere.—Advertisement. Spanish Influenza During Illness and Convalescence yee and Body Resistance must be supported and maintained. Nourishment is necessary, and must be of a nature that is easily and completely digested, without pro- ducing added strain upon the impaired digestive organs. blended by a scientific process with malted grains, it affords juct the kind of food that is desired at this time to sustain and rebuild strength and body tissue, and at the same time sonthes and quiets the tired nerves. When your doctor orders Ma ed Milk insist on BORDEN’? MALTED MILK when buying it. Sold in square packages only at all drug stores. BORDEN’S MALTED MILK is gen- erally prescribed and is especially valuable in the feeding of Influenza and its conva- lescence, as well as the convalescence of pneomonia, the dreaded sequel, when vitality must be maintained at all haz- ards. Borden’s Malted Milk is safe and reliable; made from pure, rich cow's milk, and BORDEN’S CONDENSED MILK CO., 108 Hudson St., N.Y. DBordens THE IMPROVED the line these | the | Armed with their lifebelts on the themselves into the canal whieh in| in| Some of the men were armed with | those who gained | of the total of the entire operation | | Remedy and advised me to try tt! | pain in my stomach before getting | ‘is not in Se * ee |};Woman Coroner Likes Her Work}| es mortems have no shudders | Mra, Lillian Kitto, of Woodland, | Cal., has been the only woman cor ner in the state for the last fo | years—and she says she likes the job enough to be a candidate f | election Her husband was coroner up to the time of hix death. Then her father | filled the unexpired term, and, after | that, she was persuaded to run for | | the place. | News by Telegraph and Telephone Mar and Peter Dome, aged city jail, nd with operating a real estate “ gume. | Funeral services for Mrs. Anna Whitmore, of 335 Weat 79th at., | jwho died at her ome, following an attack of paralysis, will be held Sat. | urday afternoon at the Fremont | Undertaking company | | Nenwar construction restrictions | | will be modified ax war conditions | permit, when representatives of state councils of defense meet with | the war Industries board In Wash. ington, D, C., November 11 and 12, | according to a telegram received by |W. T. Proser, state secretary of pub- | Metty. | ‘The fellow who plays the big bass | | drum for the dancing at the Dream land does it with | a pedal his hands otherwine ployed. He wore a ped ometer one) night and found that the number steps he took | in one evening was the same as in| walking 10 miles. But it's not so| | hard on the feet, he says California will follow the example recently set by Washington and fur nish salmon from her state hatch. eries to municipal fish markets George Rosselet, of Berne, Switt- | erland, registered at the Hotel Frye, myn that Switzerland is existing on | |a ration which allows one pound of butter a month per person, two and a quarter pounds of of! and fat per | month, one and two-thirds pounds of | bread and one pound of potatoes a} | day. } Sergt. Richard B. Stranack, who! recently died in a Chicago hospital of pneumonia, was the second son of Mra. Katherine B. Stranack, of |964 21st ave. N., to die in the ser vice of his country. A younger son, | Raymond, died in service the! Mexican border | | Brought into federal court Wed- | nesday, alleged to have nent defama |tory posteards thru the mailx to a Seattle business man, whom he de clarea broke up hin home, Harry F. Dustin, young Nebraska salesman, | was advised to forget his domestic troubles and received a deferred | sentence: Two women called to match some | fringe at thedepartment store where John Richards is employed. The required kind was not in stock. “That fellow! don't know any-| thing,” Richards | heard one may to! the other. | while are em Then she observed he was stil! in | 804 prove that your hair is as pretty | partment of the Seattle earshot, and, without even winking «miled at him sweetly and said, “1| was Just remarking how much you looked like a friend of mine." Mixs Elizabeth Gartley, until re- | | cently secretary to President S. Penrose, of Whitman college, will soon leave for New York city, pre paratory to going overseas with the Red Cross hospital hut service. Mall communication between Fin- land and the United States has! been cut off, but communication can | be secured thru the Red Cros which will {ssue forms to be filled out and signed at headquarters by | applicants. | Edward B. Jackson, former Seattle | business man, has been promoted to | the rank of first lieutenant in the 65th infantry at Camp Funston, ac | cording to advice received by his | parents, Mr. and Mrs, Peter Jack: | son, of 824 24th ave, &. GERMANS DESERT BEER | IN WILD EVACUATION| (Special to The Star by N. FE. A.) PARIS, Nov. 7.—German officers carried all the comforts of home with them. In one place hastily evacnated by the Huns, the Yanks | found 50 kegs of beer and several hundred bottles of cognac SCOTLAND YARD (Special to The Star by N. B.A) | LONDON, Nov. 7—The Yanke | have discovered that Sgotland Yard tland, but is the home of the London police, It derived ita name from the fact that upon its site there formerly stood the resi- dence of the kings of Scotland, (Special to The Star by N. TB. A.) PARIS, Nov. 7—In one-round-up of German prisoners the Americans captured 4,000 Magyars and Slava. All were under 21 * A THRIFT STAMP a day | will keep the Hun awa: Yankee Captain Knocks Ego Out | of Teut. Prince } ) ) (Special to The 8 by N. BE. AD ( PARI Nov, TA real prin {of Prumian was in the erowd }\ prisoners captured by the Amert Scans, Dignified and indignant, he } ) sat in a chair and stared impert { ously about him. { { “Guten morgent leutnant ) American captain, who, spe } ‘German fluently, had been { tioning the prisoners. { } The Prussian prince } $ grunte unt and dindain, ) He glared Ameri { Address me as ‘your royal | highness! he demanded stiffly Stand up!" roared the captain { “How dare you address a superior { { officer in that manner? You \ only a Heutenant! ) ‘The prince wilted, stood at pain ful attention ? ( tions like a ef DARPA APD AARARAALRAPDALDAADALS | Huge War Booty Is Taken by Italy: ITALIAN HEADQUARTERS IN) EASTERN ITALY, Nov, 7-—The| value of captured material in the recent drive against the Austrians will total $5,000,000,000, it is an-| nounced. Austrian Royalty Abandon Estates COPENHAGEN, Nov from Vienna are that the archdukes and their families removed to private estates in Switz erland. DANDRUFF MAKES HAIR FALL OUT Austrian |A small bottle of “Danderine” keeps hair thick, strong, beautiful. Girls! Try this! Doubles beauty of your hair in a few moments. ‘Within ten minutes after an Ap- plication of Danderine you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first-—yes—but really new hair—growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately doubles the beauty of your hair. No difference how dull, faded, brit tle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it thru your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The ef- fect is amazing—your hair will be light, Muffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an {n- comparable luster, softness and/ luxuriance. Get a amall bottle of Knowl- ton’s Danderine for a few cents at any drug store or toflet counter that it and soft han as any been neglected or injured by careless treatment—that's all—you surely | can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little Dan- derine. MEAT CRUSE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back | hurts or Bladder bothers— — | Meat forms uric acid. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys | with salts occasionally, says a |noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys ip their ef- forts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, | then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, diz. | ziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is | ad you have rheumatic twinges. | The urine gets cloudy, full of sedi- ment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and | flush off the body’s urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stim- ulate sluggish kidneys, also to new tralize the acids in urine, ao it no longer irritates, thus ending blad- der weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injure, and makes a delightful effer- vescent lithia-water driz} WORK BY YANKS: Advices | | direction PERSHING TELLS | OF SPECTACULAR WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 The First arm under Lieut. Gen. Lig tt, haa continued tta success,” Gen. Pershing hax reported Crowming the river south of Dun- 8 use under a heavy artillery fire, which frequently wrecked the newly constructed bridges, the troops of Maj, Hines’ corps fought their way Dp the slopes of the east bank, Breaking the enemy's strong re nee, th aptured Hill 262, Min 260, Liny Devant- Dun, and drove from the Bois De Chattilon During the afternoon our gains in|’ this sector w extended northward. Dun-Sur-Meuwe was captured and our line pushed forward a mile beyond that town, as far as the village of || Milly | The troops of Maj. Gen. Summer reached the river Ceane | and mopped up the forest of Jaulnay. The important road cen ter of Rertmont fell before our vic torioun forces, who pushed on to the Bol De L'Hospice, two miles north | of that town, capturing in their ad vance the village of Letanne. At him In Co-operation With the City Authorities The Store Hours for all and Lay corps Will Be 10 a. m. to 3 p.m. ? Friday Beaumont we liberated 500 French || | citizens | Advance Sweeps On | ‘The advance of the last two days earried our line to pointa within five = miles of the Sedan-Metz railroad, one of the main lines of communication CAPITAL ISSUES MEN ; aumo CONSIDER PORT PLANS! ween Beaumont and the Bar, | Tonnage Output Exceeds Sea Los: yeas hgeny/rpeoee * corps, in close) ‘The addition to the Seattle port ida al Nov. Merge hes wi be jaison with the French Fourth army |. a te tonnage for the last quarter-yea on its left, pushed forward under |°O™™=mission’s Smith cove terminal, | ods the losses from every source he artillery and machine gun fire, Which will make it one of the largest | py a quarter million gross tons, 1c- thru the rugged forest areas beyond, publicly owned docks in the world,| cording to the British admiralty. the Stonne, The villages of Yoneo,| has recetved the approval of the|Englang has constructed half as La Hesac and Stonne were taken. 1 many Vessels alone as the other al- "We have taken, went of the |POrts and harbor facilities commis:| 4 ang noutrals combined, Meuse, 51 ditional guns, making a\"!On of the shipping board, and is total of more than 150 since Novems| now before the capital issues com ber 1 | mittee Thirty of our planes executed a|-— If you want a thing well done, ask at Washington for approval. | the waiter to bring it rare. successful raid on™ Meuse and on| evel ton loka Es. Seuening HERE'S LICK RELIEF FOR r two tons of bombs with good ef | fect |auadrons carried out many success y |ful missions, cnachine gunning ene-| my troops and greatly aiding the ad-| When your muscles become tired, | vance of our infantry Seventeen /and swollen and the joints become | enemy planes were shot down and | etitt, your circulation poor, and your two enemy balloons burned. Seven! suffering makes you irritable, an ap- ‘black and blue” spots, Sloan's Lini- ment reduces the pain and eases the soreness, Certainly fine for rheumatism, of our planes are minsing.” plication of Sloan's Liniment gives stiff neck, sciatica, lame back, Bait nee ieeh you quick relief—kills pain, starts toothache, up a good circulation, relieves con-| You don’t need to rub—it pene APIT gestion. It is easier and cleaner to trates. use than mussy plasters or oint-| Its use is so univerzal that you'll ments, acts quickly and does not consider Sioan's Liniment a friend |clog the pores. It does not stain |of the whole family. Generous size ON S CAR LOAN the skin bottles at druggists everywhere, 30c, 5 For bruises, | 60c, $1.20. The $300,000 loan from the federa! kovernment, which was needed to Jenable the city to pay for 25 new street cars purehased from the Unit jed Railway and Logging Co. of st sprains, strains, ul, will not be forthcoming, ac Tr W cording to « telegram from A. M > : Taylor, chairman of the transporta 1€ Oo rid Ss jon and housing division of the od lemergency fleet corporation i “While we are disappointed over |the decision of the government not |to grant ux a loan, we will be able to finance the deal without troubl said Mayor Hanson, Wednesday. | “The council has already authorized | the transfer of fonds from the gen- leral fund to the street railway fund to pay the bill. As a general prac- tice, this i» not desirable, but we |consider this an emergency proposi-| Linimen Comfort Shoes [pont one ea aes, Sanyal FOR TIRED FEET jee.” For those who seldom, if ever, know what it is to have com- fortable feet—feet that do not ache, or smart or burn—the “COM- FORT" shoe will prove a source of daily ease and pleasure. If you are one who suffers with tired feet that seem never to be rested—if your feet cause you so much pain that you are uncom- fortable all over, just come to our store and have your feet fitted with a pair of “COMFORT” shoes. Following are some of the styles we carry: “COMFORT” shoes of all black kid with heavy turned soles, low, rubber heels, comfortable width toes "and cushion insoles. These easy shoes come in sizes from 3 to 9, at $4.50 a pair. WIRELESS LOST, | SEIZE BAYONET PARIS, Nov. 7.—Some Yanks are | Jengineers, some are tankmen, some | jare infantry; they all have their spe- | clalties, But they're out to beat the | Hun-any old way | | Here is a typical remark. It came | |from Private Willian B. Wilson of | St. John, Kan, just after one of the American drives: “I belong to a wireless outfit. We went over with the first wave. But part of our apparatus got lost and! it waa no use continuing. We got together and decided something ought to be done. So we threw away | our wireless, got some bayonets and | went ahead with the boys.” Another shoe of solid comfort is one of all black kid with hand- turned sole, low heel and medium round, plain toe. This is a shoe combining both neatness and comfort. Sizes 3 to 8, at $5.75 a pair. Then there is a seamless comfort shoe of all kid, extension turned sole, low rubber heel and broad, plain toe—a shoe with abso- lutely No seams to hurt tender feet. Wide lasts. Sizes 4 to 9, for | $4.75 a pair. All of these shoes are sold under our small-profit selling system. The SYMONDS SHOE CO. 1516 THIRD AVENUE Between Pike and Pine Sts. Red Cross Secures Additional Room Seattle agents for the “RESTSHU,” the most comfortable shoe made, Price, $5.50 a pair. Within two days, the supply de-| 1 Cross | chapter will move into enlarged quarters at Third ave. and Uni-|2-3-—————— : ora ia veraity st This wil be the sixth|OLD AGE STARTS time this year this department hhs been forced to move into larger | space, owing to the ever-growing | needs for manufacturing supplies ‘The vacated space will be used the surgical dressing depart WITH YOUR KIDNEYS r. The oil Science says that old age begins} of w: . actior with weakened kidneys and diges-| kidney imulates the “e and enables the or- tive organs ans to throw off the poisons which ment, thus adding a seating capac: |‘'Yy, fy eng true, it is easy to be- | cause Sremarase’ ela age. New life ity for workers to the extent of 400|tieve that by keeping the didn and stseneth increase as you con- pedi 7 land digestive organs cleansec tinue the treatment: When com- hairs, and aleo give a much-needed |A00 SogetVorking order old ame pletely restored continue takin outlet for the knitting department. | Turk capsule 0: MEDAL keep you be deferred and life prolonged far beyond that enjoyed by the average person. peor over 200 years GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has been relieving the | weaknesses and disability due to| two each aariem Oil C les will in health and vigor and prevent a retutn of the disease. Do not wait until old or dis- ean has “settled. down for 90d. x sh Troops Giving Up Arms advancing years. It is a standard |Go to your druggist and get a Cc. old-time Thome remedy and hens no |of GOLD MEDAL! Haarlem Oh! cap- introduction. GOL! SDAL Haar-|sules. "Money refun ey do to onquerors jem Oil is inclosed in odorless, |not help you. Three sizes. But re- WASHINGTON, Nov. 7.—The al-|tasteless capsules containing about | member to ask for the original im: lies have entered Constantinople|S drops éach, Take them as you|ported GOLD MEDAL brand. In and are engaged in demobilizing and| Would @ pill, ‘with a small swallow ‘sealed packages. disarming the Turkish troops, ac-| ling to military officials toda. An allied military commission also has reached Sofia, the Bulgarian| capital, and is restoring order there | and disarming the Bulgars. JNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN. SU Ax Squad Destress Big Liquor Seizure After liquor has been turned over to the government by the courts in bootlegger trials, it will immediately | be destroyed by an ax squad under) of United States District Attorney R. C. Saunders, according to a new ruling. | This squad destroyed 250 quarts of Mquor Wednesda: STORE HOURS: 10a.m.to3p.m. MARINER PROMOTED Capt. Andrew Aas, veteran Seattlo | mariner, has received his appoint: ment a& master of the new French auxiliary schooner Aviator de Ter-| lines, built by the Foundation com. of Portland, pany, SW HOMES Twelve residences will be con-! structed by the Puget Sound Bridge | & Dredge Co. on 55th ave. 8, W.,| West Seattle, to help. Seattle's hous: | ing problem, ree -9 Saaremaa Att hae Sm aS

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