The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 17, 1919, Page 6

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Coming Home With the Yanks! { I20T Seventh Ave MEMMER OF SCKIPrS NorriwrestT Lmac r Telcnraph News Service of the United Preqe Association ann Mattor May 8, 1899, at the Postaffice at under the Act of Congrese March & 1878 months $2 y. 65 on 2 months, $1.50; ¢ in the State of Washington, Outatde the state, 7) $0 for $ months, or $9.00 per your, By carrier, city, FOS TY CTR J { It Pays to Pay Up Promptly i Most of us salary and wage earners get mad if anything happens to delay our Any delay in installments of our regular income disturbs ) our plans, our habits, and our tempers. We have done our 3) work and we expect to be paid for it, promptly and in full. }) That is as it should be ah But are we all as careful to pay promptly those who Serve US as we are to demand our own wages? Does the housekeeper pay the laundress and the “clean- ; ing-woman” promptly and have the maid-of-all-work’s wages Teady on time? Does the man of the house pay the man who tends furnace, or shovels snow, as soon as the work is done, ‘6r tell him to “come around next week?” The sum earned by such humble helpers*seems so small that we are inclined "to wait until it amounts to something worth while—and then write a check for it or pay in a lump. E We forget that such workers have no capital, no rainy ‘day fund to tide them over the period when our carelessness | Or selfishness denies them their just wage. Often they are oa shy, too poor, and hesitating, to demand what is only Bt right—prompt payment for service rendered. As a Sresult they are obliged to go without the food or clothing planned to buy with their earnings, with actual priva- or serious inconvenience exacted of them as the price ‘OUR fault. ; ; Tt is easy to hold off the laundress and cook, to “forget” _ to pay the little seamst s who worked late to finish the ew gown. The matinee tickets or the new collar must be lid for in CASH—and altho the work is already done the er can wait for her wage. The just woman, and the good business woman, recog- the folly of this custom of “holding off” low-paid fers. Not only is it unjust and unkind, but it is bad , for, altho the workers may not protest in words, they -EMEMBER such treatment and the woman who indulges the habit soon becomes the woman who is always “out of ip.” whose laundress fails to appear on busy Mondays, @ seamstress disappoints her in the frock promised for certain date, whose name is whispered “below stairs” with licule, gossip and dislike. And gossip and comment which starts in the kitchen not remain there. It creeps up to the merchants’ home bankers’ office, and in time destroys the credit and |‘ 4 good reputation of the family who “forgets” and “holds the wages of its humblest servants. Doubt having been shown of the sincerity of their ) Fevolution, the Germans endeavored to stage something - convincing. y checks or pay envelopes. appetite-—"Yeah, that’s the kind—btring me ” GIVE THE PEOPLE OF MEXICO _A SQUARE DEAL-NOT WAR _ Rea a " { BY THE KEV. CHARLES STELZLE One late Sur afterr Worst Job in America The worst job in the world? | A lineman, a trouble shooter, a climber of poles in the iter time. | In our hot blooded youth—we have never really been! 4 m since—we took a winter of it. || STELZLE Say man, she’s a job! | The worst days and nights are the ones the lineman has There were, of course, some outstanding ex« to be busiest, because there is wire trouble, “grounds,” down ‘* officers . And you can’t bundle up and wear fur mittens. originally robbed them. No, sir; you stick old mister spurs into yon 40-foot For hundreds of years they ha thene p ted icy pole and climb to the top, and stretch out ck the land which get t ther § atten bet @ 10-pin arm, and “tie-in” the farthest wire; while the | **4e™. “ho were also extremely jealous of one another, as ' in the near future may again prove. blows 60 miles an hour under and over and thru you, It's a pity that the millions of » kille | them—it 4 Juarez der eral w ight 4 ytlona, especially the massea in Mexico, who of which, the Spaniards had ae *—to win 1 by their opments ndly stru Mexicans, who are lights in a blizzard-filled night, and fumble in the te mighty careful to get all the facts before for the switch so you could turn off the current and faction electrocution. Generally you were handed half a dozen Untiows” masta eurted—perhape hanged ‘teeth cracking jolts before the night was over. ot a The linemen and trackwalkers and their fellows, who f5% open lines of wire and rail communication across this) ~~~ -heaped continent, deserve a medal a day, and all the, ‘ash they can squeeze out of the boss. The next toughest job we know of is being a section hand in the summer time on the Mojave desert where it gets 130 in the shade and no shade from Devil’s canyon 500 ) miles either direction. But nobody except Apaches ever tackled that job. we take sides with any or shot—but let jeal before we en make age to “For six years we have used Dr. Caldzwell’s Syrup Pepsin in our family and feel we could not possibly do without it, especially for the children.” (From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by Mrs. Earl Cowell, Ce- ment City, Mich.) Cork has honored Wilson with the freedom of the city. Had it been the key to the city, we suppose it would have been a bottle-opener. Sen. Coman-a Bit of Advice They're talking of running you for governor. That is, ‘the dark lantern.boys at Olympia are. Maybe some of them | would-like to run themselves. Maybe not. Anyway, you're your share of the gubernatorial talk. Me lt, let’s be real chummy and candid about this. a ive’ your money. Save your dough, your time, your _ hopes, your energy. . You won’t be governor of this state, Senator Coman. . Because, you see, the governor has to canvass for votes mm in the open. And this secret session business doesn’t make the least bit of a hit with anybody who is on the square E “politically. id Anyhow, if we want the dark lantern kind of a gover- p> @ Tor, why not get the real gem in the collection? ae Why should we bother with a Coman or a Louie Feeble | Hart? We might just as well have the real brains of the ® dark lantern boys—the pure, unadulterated, patented and copyrighted article—Senator Howard Taylor. | F This is free advice to the “regulars”—but it’s darned ) good advice, even if we say it ourselves. | * Children become constipated as readily as do their elders, and the result is equally dis- tressing. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is ideal for children because of its pleasant taste, posi- tive, yet gentle, action, and its freedom from opiates and narcotic drugs. DR. CALDWELL’S Syrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggists Everywhere 50 cts. (2) $1.00 ATRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED, FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 459 WASHINGTON STREET, MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS 4 + They're trying to talk of Senator Comer for gove ernor at Olympia. Comer? No, Gonner. Good night! | Senatorial Ostriches i Emulating the ostrich, the © in the sand. It lays a rotte lie utilities committee. government by secrecy. This ate machine is made up of old-fashioned, short-| sighted individuals who would rather wreck their party i tate senate sticks its head gg the first week—the pub- en it proceeds to champion| In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which 19 the 4nd strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the te corn off the cob; guaran re. XAMINATION FREE patients who ested our work coming to you are in tt nt place, Bring tha ad with. ¥ Open Sundays From 0 to 12 for Working People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS 207 UNIVERSITY 99. Opposite r-Paterson Ca iSTAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS And what did Howard Ta ylor whi: , i Feeble Hart's cars today, we wonder? 4 New York's harbor strike has been put up to Wil- gon. Calling in the chief pilot, f “tes THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JA you do it with no artics, nor overcoat, nor muffler, nor are conscious that they have been w 1 by a at t unscrupulous loves. people, should have for leadership men who are as r to well them | out as th original enemies were Another pleasant chore used to be to make the rounds of If anything breaks loose in Mexico, we in the Ur Staten should REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS, than respond to publie sentiment. TEETH $15.00 Bet of #10.00 Perhaps the senator you helped elect thinks he is ys yf he ayn a0 ea 33:38 ile Me ‘Eatpoe FOU. helped i $4.00 Crowns 81.00 esen r yc s ave} > sena ¥ Nd ey our sentime nts. Se veral said so on the senate $4.00 Bridge $4.00 Noor yesterday—and then voted for secret, autocratic gov-| $2.00 Ams $1.00 ernment. It might be well for you to write him. Some al k 4 rar : 5 work guaranteed for 15 y n taken tn of the rubber stamp senators are honest enough to change | morning “and et toctie ware’ day, teeamtne Ah ali Nk camps, no doubt, when they awaken. Tent “Se four present pact ded ty our s ; hen the on 4 our present pa Even the ovtrich kicks over the traces once in a’ while, | °®!l¥ boil oa) wae Wee ikidney disease ARY 17, 1919. Letters From Soldiers | i 1] INVESTIGATE, SAYS GOB Editor ‘The Star: Remember the Bastland! Whe tland turr od hundred lives were lomt and then we 1 an investiga tlor The 4 hing is going to if th loaded to y not hold ar ait unui bun A CHICAGO GOR SOLDIERS tor The Star and sailors ge MISTREATED returned SAYS. 4 nquare should f a floor COUNT FIFTY! NO RHEUMATIC PAIN Don't suffer! Instant relief follows a rubbing with old “St. Jacobs Liniment” pain! It iniment nts and it takes elling. all honest trial atiffnens. rheumatism BOMB SIGE TEA * WNT EBAY HR Ladies! Try this! Darkeps beauti | fully and nobody can tel&Brings | back its gloss and youthfulness r! Rub | Common garden sage brewed] into a heavy tea, with sulphur and| alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Mixing the] ge Tea and Sulphur recipe at me, though, is troublesome. An| or way ix to get the ready-to preparation improved by the tion of other ingredients, a » bottle, at little cost, at dng stores, known as “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound,” thus avolding a lot of muse. | While gray, faded hair ts not | sinful, we all desire to retain our | youthful appearance and attractive |ness, Hy darkening your hair with | Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Cony. | pound, no one can tell, because it does it so naturally, so venly | You just dampen a sponge or soft} }brush with it and draw this | through your hair, taking one small | 1 and at a time; t ng a disappeared, After jon or two your| beautifully dark, id Juxurtant and you younger. Wyeth’s and Sulphur Compound is al ehtful tollet requisite. It is not intended for the cure, mitiga evention of disease. | | tion or pr EAT LESS MEAT AF BAGK HURTS | Take a Glass of Salts to flush] Kidneys if Bladder bothers you—Drink lots of water. Ea pre form « authorit meat excites the } eventually | n some known come o }up and ea part ounces of Jad pl urmaey; tak onful in a} breakfast for a} ill then | neutralize | t no long bladder ai | cannot injure any one mak 4 delightful effervesce lithia~water drink, which millions o! men and women take now and then| to keep the kidneys and urinary or gins cloan, thus avoiding verious | * FREE DOCTOR “st “NOT A SINGLE TWINGE OF PAIN” EVERY COAT, SUIT AND DRESS MUST BE SOLD Wonderful Values at O’Hara’s End of the Season Clearance Sale Every Garment Marked Considerably Less Than Half Price At $10.00 At $15.00 At $19.50 At $25.00 Suits & Dresses Less Than Half Price O’Hara’s Upstairs Women’s Store Second Floor—Economy Market CORNER FIRST AVE. AND PIKE STREET. « Pom Poms, Plushes ones, Velours and other Full length, foll eut Coats*in twelve dif ferent models. Trimmed and plain. Vifly Coats, values up to $35.00. Beau- tiful modets, all shades and sizes. Eighty Coats in fall lined models; plain and trimmed; values up to $45.00, Over one hundred of the best Coats, Regular prices $15, $50, $60 and up. Go te the RIGHT DRUG CO. 169 Washington St. aod Lill First Ave And/the Doctor will give you a carefal examination and prescribe fer you PREE. Liberty Bonds at market rates. Bought and sold The Seattle National Bank Bond Department Second Ave. and Columbia St, If you are sick you cannot do bet-| ter than take advantage of this offer. We save you best powlbie THOROCAIN IS WONDERFUL!” } This, in Effect, Is the Verdict of Seattle People Who Have Proved for Themselves the Blessings of My Painless Method “FREE EXTRACTION WEEK” ENDS TOMORROW 1,100 TEETH EXTRACTED SINCE SATURDAY | ier shins could be more convincing than the evidence of the patients who have in the past few days availed themselves of my offer to prove the painlessness of my Thorocain method. All sorts and conditions of teeth were brought to me—abscessed teeth, overlapping teeth, embed- ded roots, impacted wisdom teeth. These were extracted without a twinge of pain or inconvenience. As many as 21 teeth were taken out from the mouth of one person. Mr. Beers, What They Say auoted ‘elsewhere. But if sou About “Thorocain” could realize what an undertak- ing this ordinarily is you would have learned at first hand what a blessing indeed is THORO- CAIN. XTRACTION is but one phase of the work of the dentist, but THOROCAIN is effective in all phases. The grinding down of teeth for crowns, the extracting of live nerves at one sitting, the preparing f vities for filling—all this is done without test shock to the most timid or sensi- ROCAIN IS perfect! That is the prove for yourself and without { my office tomorrow—the last Free Extraction Week.” Snow a | sis z now | “bade OME in, tomorrow and have a bad tooth removed— untill ' i har or twenty if you need them, Learn for yourself eo oh whether or not the nything to fear at my hands, cpt Wah 2: u ’ banished pain Z ‘1 te thar I ver thoug . gueh Know that a thin a | iy be. T have ' ne past in this no shock I office—that THOROCAIN has sent it away for all time, M dread to cor RBoeers that this offer is absolutely free, There 1 are no “strings” to it you place yourself bd under no obligation to me wh wr. Tam only too , glad to be able to offer this proof—to 5 boen completely that I have succeeded in my par f a, but thank painless by THOROCAIN. 1 Frodness, you ca T° carnal me, for you can't help telling gt it all was—how perfect THOROC! note tw COME AND TEST Location “THOROCAIN” FREE Open evenings by appointment Phone DR. WM. H. THOMPSON. PIONEER Corner First and Yesler Way DENTIST Over Shoe Store Entrance 95 Yesler Way

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