The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 27, 1919, Page 10

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ZAR FOLKS: ; in Cycles of Bix inthe Witton & Co. ‘ization. plays an important part business. are six letters in the WILSON. There are Vice-presidents—first aids Mr. Wilson. That started) “Six” idea three years| this month, when Mr. gave his name and to the business. The) rs considered it a good} of the first things) tf Mr. Wilson took! to adopt a slogan mean something at would keep every- on their toes to live up The slogan selected [es Ps Le next oe tine on the pro- elop a fine irit in the or- in which all should ‘workers and of- was done at once. Note that there are six in the word “spirit.”| Baby Blinded | from Eczema “The child's head and face re almost a solid sore The eyes perfectly blind Doctor said the worst case he had ever . One sample of D. D. D. did wonderfal work. A complete eure followed” Thos. o you have had six letters from far in which I have dweit ‘on the “spirit” that exists in & Co. organization. Re BE T have proved to you that foundation of a successful must be a on the heart, j the loyalty, the integ 4 the enthusiasm and the pride of _ wor pled with the hon. res ° recognition and co- of the busi- family. of the me and his ven whet DD u ei ip aad we i felt Tou, ne DD = Beighborhood. ener money back Sale ee first are relieves you 35e, 60¢ and $1 PRP. foundation of the Wilson & Co. ds built on these six prin- that is why its slogan. Aé Wilson Label Protects Your Means x much to the peoples | world. would this slogan amount to @id not have back of it the and sincere efforts of the of- and its twenty-five loyal, earnest workers? Every woman knows that con- tinual use of the hot curling tron | means brittle, blistered, parched, dead-looking hair, with burnt. un- even ends. Theres no need of any- | one using that instrument of torture, | now that we know what can be/ accomplished by the occasional ap- | plication of ordinary liquid silmer- | ine. This is not only more effective, giving the hair a fluffier and pret- tier curl, but tends to promote its! In, food products they |hes!th, luster and uty. Any! “? (druggist can supply silmerine in| it-under the Wil-|tiquid form. and a few ounces wiil last many weeks, so it is quite eco- nomical to use. The approved way is to part the hair in several strands, and with a elean tooth brush soply the ligui 1a the full length of strand overnight transformation ts agree: ably surprising to one who hi never tried this simple and harm) method. ‘‘Cure Your Rupture Like Cured Mine” be a scrap of paper ind the world has had of “scraps of paper.” by “angles” is this: 1 to show you, for instance, ‘workers consider that their jwed in producing duatify the com- slogan—which should be very to you when it comes to Products. by twenty-five thousand who recognize their indi- Fesponsibility and who would under any circumstances, either or deliberately take part in out to their fellow human in all parts of the world, im- or impure food products. Ceptain Collings sailed the seas for man bad dou him to not only remain kept him bedridden for years.’ He| tried doctor after doctor, and truss after truss. No resulta. Finally he was | assured that must either submit) erous and abhorrent opera- | tion or die. He did neither. He cured would not have it on their con-| himself tnates , for 1 have talked with hun-|' of them—many in every de- of the business—and they imbued with the spirit to give p the Company all they have of! and care and loyalty and honor. &@# an illustration what a Rus ‘workman employed in wa Department said to me. his enthusiasm and and skill with which he aml asked him why he was Ip make seed ¢ things in broken Fnglisl if. I have wife and and I giv'em good m things good eating. ind children they keep very ez, tat pure food. ik he: M Captain Collings made a at If, of his condition, and at Iai rewarded by the finding of the mathod that so quickly made hive a well, strong, Vigorous and happy man. id by name. om that go out Wilson label are fine—very I know. 1 cat ‘em, They me method; good.” ate and inexpen- efy ruptured person in the a have the Captain Col- he se dyn to me, and taking «| lings book, telling all about how he pencil a piece of brown|ecured himself, and how anyone may out ‘of hh his pocket, he wrote| follow the same treatment in their ¢ last name of which is| own home without any trouble. The | book and medicine are FREE. ‘They Ps got through | will be sent, prepaid, to any ruptu : “Just | sufferer who will fill out the below 7 Now coupon. But send it right ‘awa: short American name. Soon |mow-—before you put down this paper. 40 be American citizen, to emiled and went back ‘to his FREE RUPTURE BOOK AND REMEDY COUPON Capt. W. A. Collings (ine.), Hox 28C, Watertown, N. 'Y. Please wend Rupture Remedy out any obligatio whatever. Name . Address true test in the produc- ction of food is when the w is willing to eat what le produces. I saw with my eyes how sausages are and I want to tell you) now have a very much} desire than ever be- to eat sausages and grid- cakes for my Sunday ming breakf: your FRER nd Book with- on my part Bincerely, William C. Freema‘ 181 E. 23rd St, New York C ity. mnt.) Fi om ete: MENDEL L, ww was | Taar noise ? Log VOTE ON WIRE ‘STRIKE| THE GREAT AMERICAN HOME NATIONAL POLL IS BEING TAKEN The Fair, Liberal and Broadminded Policy Telegraph and Phone Work-| ers May Walk Out CHICAGO, Mareh Balloting on @ nationwide telegraph and tele- phone strike was under way today. Opposition to tinaster General Burleson’ wire administration was maid to be responsible for the polling of union telegraph operators. President 8. J Commercial Telegraphers’ Union of America, said 400,000 ballots had been mailed, With some locals now in favor of a strike, Konénkamp said a decision will be reached quickly. If | strike is decided upon, it probably will eccur within a month. Burleson is blamed for an “tndif- ferent attitude,” by which telegraph mpanies were permitted to avoid urning union men to jobs, Demands by the wire men are: Right to belong to a union. Right of collective bargain! Reinstate- ment of all union men discharged be- cause of union affiliation, and com pensation for time lost. An Increase in pay t advanced living costa. Standardization of wagea Konenkamp mid 1,000 telegraphers had been discharged in the Inst year | because of their union activities Konenkamp said he sent out 125, 000 ballots, and the rest were mailed out by the International Brother hood of Electrical Workers Springfield, I. The two organiza tions made similar demands and pre <x bho awne “Help Us Destroy Snobocracy* on This Continent,” Message of Canadian Women to U. S: BY JACK JUNGMEYER (N. EB. A. Staff Correspondent) VICTORIA, B.C, March 27.—“Let}| American women unite with Cana dian wolnen to stamp out snobocracy on this continent!” Mra. Ralph Smith, British Colum | bia parliament member, asked me to send this appeal in behalf of the Dominion's womanhood to every cor ner of the United States. | “It is." the slyeat alien | enemy of democracy, doubly danger jous during our period of joint re | | construc! tion, feeding the red fever) | the world is seeking to allay | ahe maid, | erty and equality, do our part.” As logisiative director of the Fed: | eration of Women’s Institutes, Mra, ences, belug neither partisan nor feminiat.” And, “fast being human.” has made her yoloe effective during two sensions of the provincial houre and made her a power in organizing Can ada's wotanhood for the tests of readjustment. RECIPE TO DARKEN GRAY HAIR A Cincinnati Barber Tells How to Make a Kemedy for Gray Hair Mr. Frank Harbaugh, of Cincin nati, O., who has been a barber for more than forty years, recently made the following statement: “Any one can prepare « simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, and make ft noft and glossy. To « half-pint of water add one ounce bay rum, a small box of Barho Compound and \ [ounce glycerine, These ingredients ean be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until the desired shade | i= obtained. This will make a gray. haired person look twenty years lyounger, This is not a dye, it does Smith speaks for over 100,000 Cana dian women, many of them soldiers wives, sisters and mothers who have | "t «ticky or greasy, and docs not "| not color the most delicate scalp, ts lerable part of its people is an in- =| dictment against a nation, | | then leave them severely alone to already launched a campaign wena | this insidious “enemy alien.” I had watched her in action dur-| ng & house seaxion—a woman of | 53, mother of soldiers and grown) daughters, widow of the parliament member whose chair she now’ occu pies, gracing on occasion either a meeting of coul miners or the salon of Buropean royalty—a representa. | tive daughter of the Dominion. And 1 had asked her what part Canadian women were taking in re construction. “This period has awakened us to} a@ realization that we were not acting in concert on any of Canada’s vital problems,” she replied. “As women | we had no big, effective organization. Distressing experiences during the war and its aftermath have aroused Canadian women to the importance lof coordinated social action. “Only how are the separate wom | | men’s societies federating nation: | ally “The biggest single purpose in our | program is to Canadianize every | man, woman and child in the Do-| minion, thru broader education, in- stitational work and just common) neighborliness. We have been too neglectful of the outsiders wo have | invited to make our land their home. Patriotism is an emotion, not a mat- | ter of ' “WE MUST BE OUR BROTHER'S KEEPER OR THE BOLSHEVIKI WILL, Deporting enemy aliens, white necessary, iwn't sufficient. To har- bor without assimilating any consid- | “We invite them to our shores and grope, to misunderstand, to be with us, but not of us, “Nor is it necessary to crush the finer race qualities these people bring into the melting pot. It’s only neces#ary to make the pot actually melt and amalgamate, “And so, while the men are, for the most part, working out the problems of land for soldiers, better housing, employ- ment, and finance, our women are organizing to mother Can- ada’s adopted residents as we have mothered our own children, to cradle them in love of coun try” More women, both in the United States and Canada, should be in legislative bodies and political com missions, during this period of na tional re-creation, contends Mra. Smith, “Many who believe themselves unqualified,” she said, prove admirably. fitted for s service, cleverness, extraordinary gifts are not re quired, Men no longer resent the appearance of women in legislatures a4 an unwelcome and futile intrusion. They are glad to work with women who are in earnest and who have any vision—glad to get their viewpol ind co-operation, as it affects tee. common welfare, “My own guide has always been just the ordinary human instincts and promptings and family expert- rub off.” There is one remedy that seldom fails i skin disappear | antiseptic liquid, clean, wont safe for ive ‘The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, Q, Drink Hot Water If You Desire a. Rosy Complexion Says we can’t help but look better and feel better after an inside bath. To look one’s best and feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fer- mentations and poisonous toxins, before it is absorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incom: bustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount, of indigest ible material, which, if not elim! nated, forms toxins’ and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are intended to suck in only nour. ishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink, every morning upon arising, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of washing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, Ii kidneys and bowels, before putting m food into the stomach. Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid complexion are those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath; othets who are both- ered with headaches, bilious ‘spells, acid stomach or constipation, should begin this phosphated hot water drinking. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate costs very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outstde, so “jond was nearly sented similar grievances, The Elec trical Workers’ union includes tele phone linemen, repair men and me chanical and electrical workers. CAPT. CUTTS DEFEATS DUNN Guards Preserve Order in Butte Election Council BUTTE, Mont., March 27,.—The of | ficial check of the poll books, which | was made by the city council last | night, showed that Captain William Cutts defeated W, F. Dunn, associ ate editor of the Butte Bulletin, for the democratic nomination for mayor at the primary election Monday, Armed guards attended the meet ing of the council to preserve order Friends of Dunn charged the nom ination was stolen from the news paper editor, The feeling at the meeting was intense, and the guards searched every one present for arms before the result of the canvass was announced. Dunn will run for mayor as a non-partisan. BRITONS ACCEPT U. S. CHALLENGE LONDON, March 27.—The British air ministry, accepting the challenge ot the American navy, announces that an early attempt would be made to accomplish a transatlantic flight in seaplanes Preparations are being rushed at the Felixstowe depot for shipping to Newfoundland a mammoth triplane flying boat known as the “Felixstowe | Pury.” It ix maid to be the largest craft lof ite kind in the world, and will carry a crew of five. It will stop at the Azores and possibly in Lisbon for fuel. Col. J. C. Portem, it is understood, will be hsedl navigator. U. S. Sells Vast Ordfiance Supply WASHINGTON, March 27.—Ord- nance material to the value of $201,- 110,21 has been ordered from the United States by foreign govern- ments, the war department stated to- | day. Plates, picric acid, guns and high ex- plosives. These have been purchased by the governments chiefly for re- placement or for experimental pur- poses, Buyers include France, England, Italy, TAberia, The Netherlands, Switzerland and Cuba. The Cyecho- Slovakia government has bought | $1,016,249 work of machine guns, de- fenaive hand grenades and personal equipment. Wife of Sheriff Foils Jail Break TWIN FALLS, Idaho, March 21 —An almost successful attempt to saw thru the bars and escape from their cell in the Twin Falls county Jail on the part of Robert Houghan and Fred Tillman was foiled last night by Mrs. A. N. Sprague, wife ot Sheriff Sprague. She discovered some of the pris oners in the act of cutting their way thru the bara. One bar had been cut and the sec severed when the plan of the prisoners was discov ered. The men are held on charge of robbing a Twin Springs, Nevada, hotel. Dedicates Song to the 91st Division ‘Try ft on your plano, girls The only song written, published for the benefit of ex-soldiers and sailors, and dedicated to the gallant Vist division, is “Our Gallant 91st Wild West Division.” The song is not to be sold in music stores, but will be handled exclusive- ly by men in uniforms and the thea- tres and other places of amusement. The entire song was written by Thomas Bruce, a Spanish-American jn war veteran, AFTER NEW INDUSTRIES ‘To study the method of develop- ment of industries in other cities for the purpose of introducing new in. dustries in Seattle will be the duty cf special committee of the Cham- ber of Commer appointed by! & Chairman A, 8, Downey hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs, Luna Park Natatorium opens March 29th.—Advertisement, Konenkamp, of the jf at} | —OF THE— M. A. GOTTSTEIN FURNITURE COMPANY Justifies Its Standing as Seattle’s Popular Credit Home Furnishers We solicit and invite the accounts of all home furnishers on our liberal cred { ments. bn | SOLDIERS AND SAILORS it terms. Soldiers and Sai We have made no increases in our first payments or install- Special consideration will be shown lors whether still in service or honorably discharged. Sole Agents for the 100 per Cent Union Made BUCK’S RANGES AND STOVES You save $10 to $20 when you buy a Buck’s Range. Your old stove taken in exchange. Dresser Specials An unusual Dining Tabi laced on sale advantageous purchase of Nena tent an Fintan, * will Friday morning a& $20.00 plain Oak. 42-in. top. Special. 4 $22.50 922.50 plain € $25.00 plain Oa in Oak, Three patterns of solid oak Dressers, nll like pieture, the difference only being in sine of mirrors, at specially reduced prices for $25.00 plain ‘Oak, 45-in. plan thin week These Dressers are SOLID OAK with 2 «mall a: Tops measure 19x38 inch TAL ora. With 12x20 mirror, SPE With 16x22 mirror, SPE With 2@x22 mirror, SP Terms: $1 edorong excellently built of 2 long draw- 916.50 Sines $1 Weekly nd -In. top, Pleert 45-in. top, Special . 45-in. top, Jd ‘Tesi $1. Down, $1 Weekly ‘M.A. GOTTSTEIN' FURNITURE CO SEATTLE” ‘s POPULAR HOME _FURNISHER Items ineluded are powder, steet| DISCARDED MATERIALS OF WAR FINDING SALE WASHINGTON, March 27.—Sales of materials and equipment no long- er needed by the army amounted to $42,499,827 during the week ended March 14, the war department an. Says Editor of ahs ‘Take pain Peipaigobeta) is the advice of physicians to thin, delicate, nervous people who lack vim, enerky and nerve force, and there seems to be ample proof of the efficacy of | this preparation to warrant Tec= ommendation. Moreover, if we judge from the countless preparations and | treatments which are continually being advertised for the purpose of ak tn thin people fleshy, develop- 1y hollows and angi u ollows and angle cur ines of health and beauty, there are evidently thou- sands of men and women who keen- ly feel their excessive thinnes: Thinness and weakness are usually duo to starved nerves. Our bodies Reed more phosphate than is, con, tained in . Physicians Calin there ta nothing that will ply thia deficiency so well cy the ganic phosphate known Simone drug fats ha. Uitrosphosphate, which is faexpenniv ‘and is sald by most all quarantoo of sat- intacton of mon or money back. By feeding the jes.directly.and by. supplying pissin the soft curved 4 bust, and re-| phate; by|not felt as nounced today. Items ihcluded are airplanes, horses, building material, clothing, machinery, real estate, office equip- ment, motors and trucks. Luna Park Natatorium opens March 29th.—Advertisement. SHOULD BE PRESCRIBED BY EVERY DOCTOR AND USED IN EVERY HOSPITAL sicians’ Who's Who.” )the baie cells with the necessary phosphoric food elements, _bitro- Phosphate quickly produces a we come transformation in the appea: Jance: the increase in weight fr |quently being astonishing. Clinical tests made in St. ine's hospital, N. Y. showed that two pati gained in'weight 23 and 27 pounds, respectively, through the administration of this organic phos- both patients claim they have rong and well for the past 12 ‘This increase in weight also car- ries with it a general improvement in the health, Nervousness, sleep- Yeasness and ieck of energy, which n always accompany excessive thinness, ‘soon disappear, dull eyes become bright and pale checks glow with bloom of perfect health. Physicians and hospitals every- recognizing its mer in ever, increasing [phate should’ be praveribed by every 1514 TO 1520 SECOND AVENUE, NEAR PIKE WASHINGTON, March 2%. war department today the following organizations been assigned to early convoy: hospital 92, bakery company 397, the following organizations of 35th division: Sixtieth field brigade headquarters, 128th, 120th field artillery. THIN, NERVOUS PEOP NEED BITRO-PHOSPHA ‘What It Is and How It Increases Weight, Strength and Force in Two Weeks’ Time in Many Instances doctor and used in every hospi increase strength and nerve and to enrich the blood.” Joseph D. Harrigan, former. ing specialiat to North E i pensatory, says: “Let those weak, thin, nervous, anaemic or down take a natu ‘unadulte 1 substance such as bitro- and you will soon see some asto jishing results in the increase nerve energy, st! of mind and power of endurance.” Bitro-Phosphate is made of the organic phosphate ¢ referred to in the National Dispensatory as being aeta tonic id nervine and @ tion which" has recently) considerable reputation in the ment of neurasthenia. Th, of excellence, strength aad purl ite ‘qubatance ta ey Guen for every Bitro-! rhowphate Diet manufactured in, st strict, accor’ with the U. armies 33 Feduirementa, Bltrorbaepee, therefore not a pat etn should not be confused with @ secret nostrums, so-1 tes or widely advertised alae

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