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THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1919. a TAR STARSHELLS | Editors Mail Where Can I Find Relief From as cen eae | Itching, Terrifying Eczema? Mr, Venizelos is the itching | 20T Seventh Ave, Near Union St. OF SORIFFS NONTHWRST LeAGUM OF nw | Saaieicaemeememmmemean a A WorD FROM| Peltor The Star JOSE WISK as a moderate and very | ae se PIKE STREET eal This Question Is Ever on the = Lips of the Afflicted a" au og COND AVENUE There's no | we ro mut fro | =e = Pm a Fashion Show Tuesday Afternoon 2: o’Clock Garment Section 5... will | t months, ep it haw for otherd who have Outside ‘the % ahs wet ente ax you have ear. ear ‘city, ’ year, By rier, ety, n view of the great number of |" ~ eoks who wift still remain under bone Main 00 Private Ce Ph a | restaurant mination. | “ 0 “eo fol , chief medical adviser is an ee iad Our Annual Sale and The Bar Sinister Exhibition of aaiad is + | . ° ® Men beg for bread and shelter and you, men and bores Swept am yanwing thru tu (0) Ante Minor, with nearty Women of Washington, stand idly by and see your ° Seabee | | Fepresentatives hand them a stone! Men who fought ne ol ‘ 00 sehie ‘your battles and the battles of the world return now q y ( ohn © with their duty we!l performed and while you listen | to the deadly soothing words of men whose patriotism sa. Sak. tate sual " never led them far from public coffers, these servants say from the magic hand " of democracy walk hungry. He is the ul of hie harp, and his} A simple duty to men whose time has been spent ee ec ere ee our service, and who forfeited their places in civil sought the proper treatment that i#|ders, and he will take pl ne a restatement within your he just claims of Greece, Northern Pr alien comeantetiet. Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga Offers you every opportunity to satisfy your desires for new silks at moderate prices. You cannot but exclaim over the values—they are exceptional. Wonderful Showing of Black Silks * of Asia Minor @ $00,000 Greeks in Eastern Ru is the price that became effective today on the Pure fa and Bulgaria, about 400,000 ireeks in the interior of Asia Mine F) Specious, fine spun talk of “federal and state duty” d of “men who have learned to live on small pay and p own Liberty bonds,” put you in dreamless sleep @ they dole out charity to these sons of your The Star holds in confidence the name of a sailor at Bremerton yesterday after 38 days in the hospital with six dollars in his pocket and no job sight. It holds, too, the name of a man who applied iterday to the state welfare commission for aid and was told that until all war organization funds exhausted the state fund could not be touched. The Star will not tell the name of a soldier who given a second-hand suit of clothes by the Red pss that he might accept a job. are secrets of. the men who fought your 4 Their poverty shall not be blazoned forth. is the plain and simple duty of this state, which so much to those brave men, to make possible alleviation of their distress without demanding it they lay their personal poverty bare before the Wake! Will you make beggars of heroes? Will mark with the brand of pauper these men who ed your flag with honor? Oh, you who are American at heart and beyond ir pocketbook, call a halt on these legislators who draw the black diagonal of betrayal in the mark the bar sinister across the crest of Washington. Amendment 9 h a sense, Amendment No. 9 is the most import- ion before the voters at the election Tuesday. defeat ‘is absolutely necessary to preserve the) t health here. for no other reason, go to the polls tomorrow, ip defeat it. ndment No. 9 proposes to take from the health sioner of the city the power to curb epidemics. d take from him the power to make necessary regulations. : Amendment No. 9 would place these powers in inds of the city council. Nothing more absurd could be espn The commissioner is a man traine itation matters. pw can the council, a body of laymen, compare with physicians and medical experts? is today the healthiest city in the world for im endment No. 9 would risk and endanger this elous record. "It would make the health of the city a matter of against it. ling Useless? An American woman, first a news correspondent, then in Red Cross work, came back from Europe. Two New sirls, sisters, would have come on the same‘boat if they) slipped down to death in the sea, of their own choice. Well, this American woman explains this. She says: tbody in Europe feels useless. The great and the little, ong and the weak meri and women, they feel each one they have done so little—O so little!—of all that needs| done. Never did the individual note his own insig- nce $0 keenly as now when the after-the-war work is i iter than the prosecution of the war itself.” iy a doubt there’s point to this. Day by day we have ‘ choice. We can buck up and do our best in the day’s Or we can be glum and say it’s no use doing any- Every real American knows which of these two handles e hold of. This country was first located and then and kept by men and women who knew how to buck and do their best in the day’s tussle. f The Turks complain that they won't feel natural without Constantinople, but for that matter they won't feel natural without Armenia. E What we want to know is whether the execution of the peace terms will provide for the execution of the wer lords. Herr Erzberger says the world will condemn the allies for the severity of their terms. Not until it for- _ gets the rape of Belgium. And now we have abolished all divine rights except the divine right of great nations to boss small ones. The last battel of the war will come when the com- pleted treaty is placed before the senate. While we talk everlasting peace, men continue to invent more efficient tools for butchering. The blood and iron policy was a good tonic, but its persistent use broke down the system. : We are determined that there shall be no more war, ‘and equally determined to be ready for the next one, Connubial bliss is largely a matter of appreciating the same jokes. Real Americans stand for Americanism and no other ism on earth! Peace hath her hates no less bitter than war's. in health and| y for you, yet a “little group of willful men” with Sign on a delicatessen | he Turks, and 60,000 to the |dow on I Dill Now Bak: | bs Hut ing in Her Parkin | first And Ashley ¢ joes what ey ville John Cuff has a laundry In Brook jlyn, N.Y ie Cluck live see ‘The Germans have begun to kil one another, Weshdworry THE REAL ESTATE AGENT IN 5 YEARS THiS ) ts tr House wie Seu. /! BUILT ON A] ore" FOR — ec. GOLD MINE] ere. tx match up with an innocent clutches of a real That bird can fan out enough gaft| ! pro and con, mostly con, about a/% or lot, to waft a sailboat over | M al rug Kg to| America the colors, than | by ear bystander in the; Tt eatate agent.|of W N, J. CASSANETES, Direc AFFILIATES WITH. seven seas 11 times, First he ts in with a line that Jesse new warn a deacon, compared to! your landlord. To think of all the/ kale you've palmed over to that/ slicker, In rent. It's really nothing than second story work, even if] you do pound your ear on the thi floor, He figures up the ren you've paid in the last ten y that would have bought you five bunglehouses #0 you could be a landlord yourself by now. “Own your own home and your olf trou. blew are over.” Then the new ones | start. THIN BLOOD IG SAIS MEMGE TH TE HEATH This Indiana Man Corrected His Stomach Trouble When He Used This Tonic Treatment When a person permits his blood | to become thin and weak he is open jing the door for the entrance of dis cane, The @ ¢ mild in} form, or it ma serious. Weak- among the first to fall vi ) |fluenza, and they are generally the | | first to become rheumatic | ‘The thin-blooded person can gen erally be picked out of a crowd by | bi je de during the day and nervous unrest at all times, He is often exhaust: fter the perform a of tasks wed to be done without perce | listless fee t. eorge F*. Berg, of No. 724 East New York street, Indianapolis, | Ind., learned how to correct such a condition, and his expe © should prove he y others. “I had a called ecze My skin was und I became very nervous. My stoniach distress ed me so that I had to be extremely careful what food I ate I was rest leas at night and I noticed a steady loss of w announcement of Dr. | nk Pills in a newsp esolved to give the en After taking the first b | noticed an improvement. My |i am no longer nervous and, « | have told my Jing Dr. Will | my recovery this re | | Dr, Williams’ Pink are in | valuable in ases of the blood and | nerves. y have benefited an-| emia, after-effects of the grip and| fevers, 1 debility and sick headaches, dizziness, nervous pros tration and ha recom plishe derful results ¢ in chronic ca | A valu booklet, “Building Up the Blood,” containing fuller informa. | tion about rheumatism and other | | diseases of the blood will be sent} free upon requ | Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills 2 by all druggiste or direct Dr, Williams Medicine © tady, N. ¥., cents per box or six boxes for $2.50, on receipt Milk Dairy’s famous Ma- plewood Milk—delivered direct to your home. Call up Main 2545 or Main 4310 More d leave your 2. f rr an eave yo Prizes fo order for reg- Purity ular delivery and Quality of Maple Than Any wood prize- Milk in winning = milk Seattle and cream. Remember milk is the economical food, a quart of it is equal to three- fourths pound of steak or eight eggs. biggest value in refreshment you can possibly buy. A BENEFIT to teeth, appetite ' ands diges- tion. And the price is 5 cents. At Very Exceptional Prices ‘ The worth of these Black Silks cannot be overestimated. They are truly remarkable values. And such a selection! Over thirty different textures from which to choose! Prices range from $1.45 a yard—and such splen- did quality is offered at this price—to 34.95 a yard, which is a handsome, rich satin! —MacDeugall-Southwick, First Fleer. Crepe de Chine Specially Priced $1.25 40 Inches Wide A splendid silk in the following colors: White, ivory, Shantung, gray, black, salmon, pink, flesh, Nile, cream, apricot, navy, maize, reseda, gold, peach, silver, turquoise, old Rose, Alice blue. Spring Foulards Specially Priced $1.95 36 Inches Wide These new Silks represent all the standard makes. They come in novelty prints in duo-, trio- and multi-color effects. The ground colors are, navy, black, Copen, plum, sand, dust, dove gray and amethyst. Cheney Foulards Specially Priced $2.65 40 Inches Wide These new Spring Foulards come in fascin- ating new designs, including beautiful Aura- tone prints. On dark grounds of navy, Copen, plum, grays and Chiffon Taffetas Specially Priced $1.95 36 Inches Wide Soft, pretty materials, suitable for Summer gowns. Colors: Pink, gray, brown, lavender, green, tan, hunters’ green, orchid, purple, ceil, yellow, pearl gray, reseda, old rose, taupe, apricot, Belgium, Copen, navy, midnight, Alice blue and marine blue. Silk Poplins Specially Priced $2.45 A silk-and-wool fabric intended for the practical utility suit. It has a rich silk luster, It will wear well. Colors: Old rose, gray, silver, sand, brown, plum, Quaker, navy, Belgium, taupe and black. Satin Marchioness Specially Priced $2.45 36 Inches Wide A stunning Satin with high luster—adapt- ed for street or afternoon costumes. There are twenty-seven different colors, in plain and two-tone effects, Gown Satins Specially Priced $3.45 36 Inches Wide Shimmery, clinging Satin—“soft as the Pussy Willow!” Colors: White, ivory, cream, flesh, pink, navy, midnight blue, ceil, maize, pearl, Copen, bluebird, honeybird, silver, old rose, orchid, Jacque rose, taupe, sand, Burgundy, plum, myrtle, brown and black,