The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 13, 1918, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

gil the Charm (Returning Soldiers of Beauty) Will Lead Nations in mata oven Ma, Ree Swatting Old Evils Color to Your Cheeks and the Cause of Pimples, Blackheads, j empire that it is today. They built) the great railways that span the con tinent and Special Writer for The Star, Assigned to Vitalize and Humanize the Topios of Keonomies and Re construction, that the that bring the Atlantic and They laid the foun conquer mountain | barriers Pacific together (Copyright, 1918 by B. A) dations for the mighty industries a American troops are to be brought | that are America’s today ome aH fast as conditions abroad Paresang permit BLAZE THE WAY Do you appreciate what this} The soldier who comes out of this means? war will be far better equipped men | Few persons do After the civil war the soldiers whe fought in the armies were the leaders of thought, the shapers of @pinions, the doers of things. The war had given spur to their ener. gles and to their imagination. The soldiers we have in France have learned more adened more. tally, physteally and otherwise than | the soldier of the civil war He will seek to blaze the way to greater dé pments than we have known, He Will harriess the living streams and | them work and furnish energy idom of He will ribbon the nation with | that will pay for themeelves in to relieve us from the thre eoal br seen more in the last two years than “ thru the economies in| they would in 20 or more years of or | transportation they will make pos dinary life. They have learned more sible. He will dot the sky with th than they are aware today they have carriers that will chailenge the tailored, for the lowest possible price. learned, Their teaching began in the | clouds aa they spin thru space with training camp, It has flowered on | passengers and cargoes. | the blood-soaked fields of France. fhe brains of nen and the ener: | . ‘ They know now and (uke deep in-| gies of men have been busy for years | | terest in many things that on were in works of destructi The brains er) rod ogh-& vow A hazy of of ttle intereat to them of men and the energies of men will | hey know that the roads of ~w turn to works of construction, tly faces filled with pim-| France—roads that Cacsar bullt or “ress, improvermnt siofations, blackheads, ete. ing but unhealthy face jood impurities Cleanse the ‘and the facial blemishes di dis Caesar | it possible are fashioned on t built—saved Fran: jto supply the armies on the long front from the channel to the Vos ma in war, The man who has been a sol dior is the great adventurer in peace. “must not believe that drugs ales Will stop facial blome|mes. They never will be gatisfied peace are greater and more endut The cause is impure bicod /with the dirt roads or the corduroy | ing anner of refuse | with all mi - reads or the poorty built reads they) Wateh the returning soldier. He 's Calcium Wafers cleanse | knew in the old home state. is going to play a mighty part in 6 meet er pea seat] | THEY KNOW! America’s life for the next genera ¥ complexion until) They know the virtue of the rait-| °° road. They have sen railroads built | hastily but magnificently by Ameri can engineers to become the life lines | . | for the armies at the front. | They know the province of ship-| ping as they never knew it before. | Tha shipping question used to be an| abstraction to the boys in Kansas, or Idaho, or Indiana. Today they know that but for the “ridge of Ships,” Europe might be enslaved. | They have grown, broadened, de- veloped in mind, in body, in spirit. They have sounded the depths and! risen to spiritual heights, They no longer are of narrow vision or insu. lar ideas ve ae AY oensestenpnesenstyecatincnet y His Authority "| Is Questioned | The soldier is the great adventurer War has its victories, but those of | FORMER MARSHAL ier uate rover ror Tak | AS A MOONSHINER | kicir THEY ARE GOING TO| with operating a Nquor| WANT THINGS HERE TO RE| Newsome, former marshal of RIGHT, | Wash., is in the Snohom Such men ate going to be the re | * jail at Everett Friday, | makers of America. faiewng bis arrest Thursday in a| They are not going to be content| uate five miles north of Stanwood. | with poor reads. Have you any con: | Aa Gihorate whisky still was main-| ception of the waste there is in poor | taieed in the swamp, arresting offi- | roads? } ore my. They will be makers of roade—en- during roads, honest roads. They are not going to be satisfied with poor railroads, They know what a railroad should be. They are not going to be content with the pres ent American railroad systen, good as it is in comparison with other na OUGEN Ri a They are not going to slothful, crafty or dishonest. Men who offer ir lives to free mandkind are re- tt in the crucible | ‘The folk back home have little re- | alization of the ramified knowledge Kolchak, a former admiral in the the soldier has obtained. It ranges | Ruslan navy, was proclaimed dic | from the shoes he weare—he know tator of Russia at Omak recently, but [now the Virtue of 4 common-sense | the All Russia government refused to {shoe and the vice of a toothpick-toed | recognise him aa such, and Kolchak | Or narrow shoe. that cramps his foot and distorts his toes and causes corns and bunions and other crip LEXANDE! KOLCHAK recognize the ability of Kolchak, but world has been such a schoolhouse | for the American young man as this war has furnished. The doughboy has been learning from text-book» and from observation from the day he entered the army. | But the broadening of his mind haa been not so great as the stirring of his spirit and the elevation of his soul. He t# not a provincial Amert- can any longer, but a man who hinks and sees In terms interna onal, ‘The war has made the American soldier know himself. It has made him enterprising, resolute, reseurce- | ful. After our civil war. the soidters | went forth and gave to America the “Over There” With the Yanks BY J. R. GROVE~ ASK BUSINESS HEAD LIGHT DEPARTMENT A business manager for Seattle's light and power departinent is planned by Mayor Hanson, who will probably recommend the appoint ment of an official of this class to the council Monday. J, D. Ross, superintendent of the department, has more work than he can handle, the mayor declares, and should devote his whole attention to the practical end of the department, supervising the $1,000,000 worth of extensions for which warrants deen insued, | 8 i i i i E 3 H H a i | [ i parE ths i take long for Dr. “King’s New Discovery to relieve it . ‘Chilis, hot flushes, weepy eyes and MS6, a cough steadily growing more me phleg-n-clogged chest, head—those conditions are Wickdy and pleasantly corrected with Tr. King’s New Discovery. Colda and coughs, most bronchial Meubles, soon submit to this fifty: Mereid standby. Grownups and both like it. Promotes com- ‘and rest. this relief from “cold” misery & bottle while you think of it. druggists a Your Bowels Grateful them to function as they to, Aid them occasionally with King’s New Life Pills, Cleanse fystem of undermining impuri Mild in action, reliable and com Your druggist has them. In West Seattle THEY ARE INTRODUCED ON PAG As they spy the bombs: “Go capture ‘em, Herb?” ‘aw—, You,” ordered imprisonment of the leading} members of its directory. The Czechs | Superb Assemblage We are fortunate indeed to have this worsted of mixture, i in medium and heavy weights. It’ your time and pick out just what you want. dividual order clothes. et’s Get Acquainted We believe there is room in Seattle for a big popular priced Merchant Tailoring Establishment—a place where a man can order an Overcoat or a Suit, knowing that he will get absolutely square treatment—a Suit of substantial woolens, honestly We dre ambitious to build such an institution. We can do it only by securing the co-operation and good will of the men of Seattle. of High-Quality Woolens. superb stock to offer you at the first sale the London Tail- pling tlle—to the elements in the air do not approve of the manner In} that can be utilized for the greater which the All-Russian government a . ood of mankind. ‘There never in the | was depoved ors ever held. Whether you want a serge, cheviot, imported or domestic, we can satisfy you. nme ye Boag te cn weight . overcoat blue serge suiting, aan, tee Me —_ Note the Prices, $40.00 to $65.00, be- ing' asked by Second Ave. stores for ready-made clothes. Compare these with our offer of $30.00 for made to your in- ‘ Here’s What We Are Willing to Do |, “Just to Get Acquainted” We Want to Be Known Everywhere As Seattle’s Dependable UITS and VERCOATS —Union Tailors —Union Clerks —Union Hours Made to Order REGULAR - $40,$50&560 VALUES Liberty Bonds Accepted as Cash All Garments Made in Our The customer is of our work. Even if you pay only fit with You Must Be Satisfied —— always right, will be our motto.. Every garment this shop must be an advertisement for the quality and as much skill and care as could possibly be exer- cised by tailors charging as high as $100. We guarantee a perfect LONDON TAILORS . A. STARK, Prop. 704 FIRST AVENUE Between Columbia and Cherry Sts, $30 for a suit, it will back. McAdoo Too Poor for Cabinet and Baruch Is Too Rich to Accept BY MILTON BRONNER retary of the treasury. He does not WASHINGTON, Dee, 13.— William want to be put in the position where Moxdor wot out of President Wil-| if he recommended an income tax of 60 per cent on million dollar incomes Avocated 70 per honorable secre- would save tax were son's cabinet be he was too| poor. Bernard M. Baruch has refused to take the vacant place because he is too rich. ‘This is the literal truth, I am told | by those absolutely in the know that McAdoo for fellow who cent could say th tory of the treasury $100,000 if the lesser adopted | Similar reasons prompted him to some the reasons assigned by McAdoo fF | refuse the railroad Job. He holds Jeaying the cabinet were the real rea-| ny” raitroad securitien, 80 do sons; that there was no mysterious | any of his friends. Many of his ck of it; no quarrel or misunderstanding with Wilson; no deep-laid political scheme. McAdoo simply felt it was up to him to get out and hustle for a competence, es- | something & business associates were men who had controlled railroads. He felt that all this made {t imperative that 1¢ have nothing to do with solving the railroad puzzle. pecially as his investn encod). 0 a Hudson tubes of New | built, has never proved a great|DECOY SQUIRREL IS income maker, Tis friends aay he USED BY SPORTSMEN is not going to head any big com mercial enterprise, but that he is| ELIZABETH, N. J., Dee. 13 going to resume the practice of law. | Thomas Havil Pa . tax assessor; With his going there leaves the|trolman Peter Demy and Joseph cabinet the only man in it with a] Eliott, superintendent of a local great grasp complex business | plant, who have sh red all squirrel problems and finance, For that rea- | Nimrods, |son the president was very anxious hunting say that thetr bi records 6 raey to draft the only other man con-| been due to the use of a decoy squir nected with the administration | rel whom he deemed of like calibre The squirrel, according to Havi Baruch, the dollarwyear chairman|iand, was captured in I A of the mighty war industries board,| war garden, and after being | Wilson was anxious to keep Baruch | was taught to imitate Theda in Washington, If he couldn't per-| vamping tts untamed companions of suade him to be secretary of thé/ the woods within range of the trio's treasury, he wanted him to be direc: | trusty shooting irons. tor general of the railroads, But} Atl that is necessary, the hunters {in both ¢ « he got a heartfelt, | say, is to turn the squirrel at la but firm “Much oblig@l, but I can't} that it may Cavort beneath a tr nocept.” | and in a few momenta it is surround The understanding here is that|/ed by bush-tatled admirers, When | Dempsey imitates a woodpecker, the decoy leaps out of range, leaving the vietims to their fate. when Baruch got out of Wall stre to serve the country, he had a f¢ une which yielded him an income of jomething like a million dollars a| y That's one of the main song why he will not serve as sec A dollar in the Red Cross is worth rea | ‘two in the bank, bags of game have | | | of thrift, since the men in the! trenches did not ery against their | Qe-Covernment Physician hardships. Consider yourself lucky 2 to be able to save and to buy War/ Savings Stamps FIRST AVE. or WASHINGTON ST. | GHT DRUG CO. STORES |] Leok for the Free Decter Sign. FEW FOLKS HAVE GRAY AIR. NOW Well-known local druggist says ev- erybody is using old-time recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur Hair that loses its color and “g i lustre, or when it fades, turns|Simply the Old-Fashioned gray, dull and lifeless, {s caused| Grip Masquerading Under by a lack of sulphur in the hair. | Our grandmother made up a mix-| ture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to]. : : keep her locks dark and beautt-|,,Spanish Influenza. which appeared ful, and thousands of women andlances of grip—or la. men who value that even color, |has swept over the we a New Name. | that beautiful dark shade of hair |0US epidemics as far which Is so attractive, use only ares S this old-time recipe, many to hav Nowadays we get this famous nning with 1831, t country had five epider last in mixture improved by the addition | of other ingredients by asking at |" for panic—| any drug store for a bottle of | int has a very low “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Com. | P pound,” which darkens the hair 4 so naturally, so evenly that no Hes body can possibly tell it has been mplicatic applied You ‘just dampen aj (Pe Principally sponge or soft brush with it and/to bed soon enough, or those who draw this through your hair, tak-| get up too early.’ ling one small strand at a time ps paanuee By morning the gray hair disap. Go to bed at the first symptoms, | pears; but what delights the la-| not only for your own sake but to dies with Wyeth’s Sage and Sul-|/avold spreading the disease to oth: tly quiet and don’t worry r- self is the only “cure” for influenza and will throw off the attack if only you conserve your strength, A lit- tle Quinine, Aspirin or Dover's Pow- der may be given by the physician's beautifully darkening the hair after a few applications, it also brings the gloss and lustre and it an appearance of abund Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com. | direct s to ally the hing. Always pound is a delightful toilet req: | Ctl! barn fan, since th pane Sen uisite to impart color and fect on the which youthful appearance to the hair. | complications It is not intended for the cure, )are chiefly pneumonia and bron mitigation or prevention of dis- heaat ettentionn these reas ant that th nt remain in ntil his strength returns—stay in bed at least two days or more e very. im- se. © and West for all SPANISH INFLUENZA-THE WAY TO TREAT IT AND TO AVOID IT after the fever has left you, or if you are over 50 or not strong, stay in bed four days or more, according to the severity of the attack. HOW TO AVOID THE DISEASE idence seems tc Prove that this is @ germ disease, spread principally rontact, chiefly through coughing, sneeging or spitting, So avoid persons having colds—which means avoiding crow drinking cups, roller towels, ete. Keep up your bodily strength by plenty of exercise in the open air, and g00d food. KEEP FREE FROM COLDS Above all, avoid colds, as colds ir- ritate the lining of the air passages and render them much better breed- ing places for the germs, Use Vick's VapoRub at the very first sign of a cold. For a head cold, melt a lit- tle VapoRub in a spoon and inhale the vapors, or better still, use VapoRub in a bengoin steam kettle If this is not available, use an ordi- nary tea-kettle. Fill’ half-full of boiling rT, put in half a teaspoon of VapoRub from time time keep the kettle just slowly boiling and inhale the Steam’ arising. NOTE—Vick's VapoRub is the dis- covery of a North Carolina druggist who found how to combine, in salve form, Menthol and Camphor with such’ volatile ofls as Eucalyptus, Thyme, Cubebs, etc, so that when the saive is applied to the body heat, these ingredients are liberated in the form of vapors. VapoRub can be had in three sizes at all drugs gists. While comparatively new in certain parts of the North, tt is the standard home remedy in the South rma of ‘over six million jars wer Vapo Rub is particularly for children's croup nally applied 9 used freely the slightest bles last year. recommended or colds and can. re and often—without harmful effect.

Other pages from this issue: