The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 26, 1919, Page 10

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COUSIN OF HUN KAISER I$ DEAD Miss Elsa Missouri Von Ka- Jow Passes Away Miss Elsa Missouri von Kalow, sec end cousin of William Hohensollern. former emperor of Germany, and granddaughter of Prince Albert of Prussia. died Sunday afic the home of her sister, Mra. J Mountain, 5634 12th ave Towing an illness of two y Countess Anna Pauline rs ‘Von Gorst, daughter of Prince Albert of Prussia, who became famous in Burope and America as a singer under the name of Madame Varina, and who died in Seattle January | 2918, was the mother of Miss Von | Kalow. Miss Von Kalow was years old Her mother and her father, Dr. Von Kalow, both were naturalized Bens, and she had been a staunc American citizen all her life, not withstanding her blood relationship to the ex-kaiser Funeral services will be held gee | @ay afternoon at Butterworth ‘Bons. h YEP! IT WAS! ST. LOUIS, May 2% Buck left $100 in a suit he wanted cleaned. It was. Is the Bread for Particular Folks— BECAUSE Made of the very materials to be had choicest Made by experts in a mod ern, sunlight plant The biggest, plant in the best equipped _ Northwest Each loaf sealed for your pro. tection in a tight, paraffin paper wrapper. DEMAND THIJS KIND OF YOUR GROCER 11¢ and 16¢ SEATTLE BAKING ,CO: 19th South at Visit THE PLANT— toka } eith- |} Edgar C.) Flapjack +k Adjutant of Salvation Army Back Famous as the champion flapjack frier with the A,B. F. in France, and & preacher of the “doughnut gospel,” Adjutant Fred Anderson will return to Seattle Tuesday night after 14] months in the Sglvation Army can teen service just behind the front line trenches. | The only Salvation Army staff of floer to go to France from Seattle Anderson left here early last year and since that time has cheered the | hearts and stomachs of thousands of weary fighting whenever they could find tm a few of his doughnuts or | Thruout to Yanks, to eat flapjacks. all last summer and up| November, Anderson made hia! headquarters in the basement of an | old ruined chateau in the Toul dis |triet: Before going over the top, the companies stationed in that district | would come into Fred's dugout for flapjacks. And they were always sat isfied. | Makes Flapjack Record Just before the signing of the arm |istice, when n the Americans’ long distance binoculars couldn't find | the retreating Heinies, Anderson es tablished a record which he chal if frre any Mapjack flapper in the | | world to equal. When battalion after [battalion of Americans was being |rushed into the fray, he made 7,800 flapjacks in 18 hours. And the last one was eaten as he took it off the griddle But the war ts over, No longer do the doughboys fight to get a Salva. tion Army doughnut, So Anderson came back He will go back to hin old task of trying to work the salvation of souls. Down among the derelicts and the wrecks of life he will carry on his work, Perhaps to some black sheep,| strayed from the ways of right, the music of the old organ, the singing of the Army lassies as they go about their thankless work on the street corners, may bring a feeling Sf con |trition. And if Anderson's little band of soul savers can do this, {will be janother feather in his cap. Back to Save Souls | To the man who has given up nearly all hope, the singing of the |women may remind him of |mother who rocked him to rest when Adjatant Fred Anderson he was a little child. The mention of sacred things, may recall the Sun day school days, It may bring back and clean from his mother’s parting embrace, trudging his way to church. Perhaps he has slipped and fallen. The narrow path has been too nar- row, and the Army may bring him new Yease on life, It may give the |him faith in the world and a hope of better days, He will be converted, -|and the workers in the Army will be TRAVELED ALMOST sw ann no AROUND THE WORLD IN SEARCH OF HEALTH: country and the boys over there. His it task is finished, and he will start Say: Only Thing That Helped Her to the weary and down-hearted. upon his return by the Salvation Army. A banquet at the Y. W.C. A. and services at Occidental and Main st. Tuesday night will comprine the program ROBBED AND SILENCED f ST. LOUIS, May 2% Like the man who went to Alas-|Schmit’s restaurant was robbed of ka in search of gold, leaving a} all cash, leaving Paul lump of the precious metal worth |nickel to telephone the police. a fortune tying under his door- steps, thousands tour the country annually seeking relief from their many ills, The health resorts are thronged, the flospitain filled, and millions of dollars are spent by those suffering from stornach trou- dle and the many complications te- salting from it, when, if they would only believe ft, relief often Jies within reach and at a cost al- Most too small to mention. The evidence regarding the hare of Tanlac in the treatment of all forms of stomach trouble is |too conclusive to even admit of |doubt. In every city, town and jcommunity throughout the United States and Canada there are many iliving, enthusiastic witnesses to jthe merits of the Master Medicine. [One of the most Interesting of the |many statements recently received | was made by Mre. W. A. Souther- land, residing at 520 South Second Street, Springfield, Ill. Mra. South- erland is one of the best known ‘and respected women of Spring- field. She sald: “What Tanthe has accomplished in my case has Been the most com- plete surprise of my life. I can hardly find words to express the ®ratitude I really feel over what it has done for me, I had been suffering from stomach trouble and nervousness for eleven years and have been treated by some of the best specialists, not ofly in this country, but also in London, England, and Old Mexico, We have traveled almostaround the world and spent over five thousand dollars trying to get my health re- stored but nothing ever helped me; in fact, I kept getting worse juntil I began taking Tanlac. I |suffered almost teyond words to lexpress from cramps and pains in| [my stomach after every meal, and as #0 nervous that I just trem- bled all the time. I could not sleep and was right on ‘the verge lof nervous prostration 1 could jfind no comfortable position at |night; my head theobbed and seem- ed to beat against the pillows, and |when morning came L felt ex- hausted. “Some of the Sete, SHARE US with specialists called my trouble nervous Indigestion. Anyway, I could not even eat milk- jtoast without suffering, and for a }long time I lived almost entirely on milk, When we came back to Springfield I was so discouraged land downhearted that I told my husband there was no use trying any longer, that there was no help for me. About this time I began reading what others said Tanlac had done for them and decided to try it as a last resort. Well, 1 soon had a good appetite, got so I could digest my food and my suf- fering ceased. So I bought more Tanlac 4 a few bottles have completely restored my health, and | not only myself, but my husband and all who k of my dreadful condition, have been surprised at the results I have gotten from Tan- lac, I am never the least bit nerv- ous any more, never know what it is to have a restless night, and en- joy three good meals a day and never have a pain or an uncom- fortable feeling afterwards, I no longer have’ that tired, worn-out look with that dull, swarthy col- or, but my complexion has cleared Up ANd Lh look and feel like a dif ferent Woman altogether. I am making this statement because 1 want the yle who may be suf fering as I wet relief to know they hout traveling world over as 1 did. I can never praise Tanlac enough.” Tanlac i# sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di- rection of a special Taniac represen- tative,—Advertisement, ot the memories of the little laf, fresh | ones more to show the silver lining | A welcome will be given Anderson | Paul) without a/ Then: Again: | So By auto: left The United Is the greatest country on earth, where man may realize a true man’s opportunity. Is, of all American cities, the Seattle tunities exist. Carleton Park expression of home. one where the greatest oppor- Is the part of Seattle giving the opportunity for the truest an American Are You an American? Being also a citizen of Seattle, you are proud of her achievements in commerce, industry, and the activities that make opportunities. You know that this city gives a man more than a “chance”—it holds the door wide open to success. You know that no city in the world is equally endowed by nature with those beautiful things that makes life here an inspiration, no place where earth, sea and sky offer in such abundance those advantages that the American has learned to demand and appreciate. We have: ARLETON — DA R K With more advantages, greater obportunities, more beautiful situation and surroundings, combined with protection, than any other high-class residence section of Seattle. And for little money. TO GET TO CARLTON PARK: Follow Kinnear Park line to West Howe st., turn to the left one block to Gilman avenue and thence to 15th ave. W. Turn over the West Wheeler st. bridge to Magnolia Boulevard to and through Carleton Park. By street car: Take Fort Lawton or Salmon Bay car on Western avenue and get off at 15th avenue and West Wheeler-street, where autos will meet all cars. This is only a temporary arrangement pending the improvement in transportation facilities soon to be announced. JONES & PHINNEY, Inc. 817 Second Avenue SUERTE Re Abe Ruef Now the “Middleman” | _ of Ideas; First Aid to Inventors BY ERNEST J. HOPKINS WN. EB. Staff Correspondent) Abraham Reuf, famous Abe Reuf y foted no less for hia un San Francisco's A |holy activities | "Curly Boss” national! as than for the genuine rm that came to him }and genial r Reuf is engaged in a in prison—A strange new t Hampered by his parole from prac ticing law a brand} new niche for himself Reuf is a “middleman of ideas.” | His job is to take hold of the idea) that is running around weak and helpless, to foster it, bring it up and |make a fact out of hy, It used to. be anyone in San P ness » has carved Reuf,”” when ancisco wanted a of privilege from the mayor or of supervisors, Today t's | See Reuf” whe anyone has an In- j vention promot jon project,.an idea that, if developed, might do the world a world of good Reuf points out thru the window of his office and says | “Walking past this building, at) lany hour of the day or night, are| $10,000,000 worth of ideas. “Almost every man, down there on | the street, has in the back of his | |head 801 notion, scheme, \some plan, which he can't develop by | himself, which would transform tthe world if developed. It may be thing from a new style labor- to a noiseless alarm clock. ally—the | with the idea has no more chance of | getting it worked out thanehe has of becoming president. It’s strange how | eople have good ideas on stb. | jects of which they are. entirely | ignorant. Need Technical ney need help 1 to! be brought into touch with technical | skill, with practical ability, with cap ital, These ideas are like the mil- Abe Ru one that grows, ef But ideas more valuable than seeda. “Of course gle person mendous need. huge gevernment instjtuti ventors’ Institute,’ with cilities to help the thinks, It would do a gr humanity than the Foundation and the Ca tute combined.” Ruef started in his st business with only two " added Rue ant handle such & ef, “no sin tre What we lack is a ion—an ‘In all sorts of nm who eater work Rockefeller negie Insti n range new brief an- lions of seeds that Nature wastes nouncements in a local paper, exercises, new sorts of newspa- pers, new wrinkles in training babies to walk and talk, new plots for stories, new political parties, new international lan- guages, new religions—why, if every new. idea filed away in the drawers of my desk were mirac- ulously to be changed into fact, there would be a ‘new Heaven and a new earth. Ruef frankly admits that the flood of ideas is far beyond his ability to tions before experts; third, to attract handle, His suggestion for a gov- |the interest of capitalists, among | ernment institution has been laid be |whom Ruef has an extensive ac-|fore Mayor Rolph of San Francisco quaintance. jana Governor Stephens of California The resutt was a deluge. Ideas began to trickle in, then to flow in, then to rush in, They became « tidal wave of appalling height and depth. “Looking over morning says Ruef, “I felt like a | © man that had pushed « little button and blown up the uni | He announced he was ready to do |his best: first, to bring unskilled in |ventors into touch with draughts men, mechanics and builders of mod els; second, to arrange demonstra ‘Mail P Plane Takes Fire; Flyer Leaps ‘LEVELAND, May 26.—His plane ching fire at a height of 300 feet, rank McCusker, of New York, pilot- ing a mail airplane, climhed on one jof the wings, and when the machine | Was 200 feet in the air, “Tt ts incredible how many ide: death. H din a patrol wagon have been submitted to me, and how many good ones. Of course there|0O his way to a hospital are plenty of cranks with perpetu McCusker is the first of the air motion machines. But if I had been|™all pilots to be killed in the per- able to bring only one idea in ten,| formance of his duty. one in fifty, to fruition, the results| Toute to Chicago, and declared before would have been beyond imagining, | he took the air that he would break all records for the flight ne cause Sche of the accident has not been dis “Bor instan there was the man | covered, with the plan for preserving eggs in wholesale quantities for centuries if necessary; the man makes | THIEF CUTS HANDBAG es Galore who can build your house out of the dirt} from the basement; and the man| When Mrs. J. J. Jefferies, 320 27th with the automobile engine that sundays 8., stopped to open her handbag on water as fuel | Saturday night at the public market, “There was the high school boy | First ave. and Pike st. the handbag who had made an electric soldering} was gone. Only the handle was iron that develops three times the/ tightly clutched in her right hand, heat of the best one on the market;/An agile purse sn the fellow with new potash|the bag free. Mrs, Jefferies told the process to snake the United States | police it contained $10 and some per- economically independent; and article |man who knows where the greatest wea port on the Pacific coast will be | some day--and owns all the land} around it, the the | sonal E TAINMENT PLANNED Local college women have been in vited to a college night to be held in “New toys, mew clothing fab- [the University of Washington com rics, new foods, new drinks, new mons, 830 p. m, Saturday, Uni substitutes for leather, rubber, | versity women will be hosts. A va- stone; new systems of gymnastic riety of features have been planned. ’ leaped to his| He was en| bricks out of ordinary earth so you AWAY; LEAVES HANDLE | tcher had sliced | ting, | the Stomach, Breath—you will | nothing better than that whole | physic — FOLEY CATHARTIC ‘TABLETS Never di int. Take one toni and feel bette ta the morning. eens Jenner, San Antonio, Texas: sve” taken and’ to be the best. r constipation and Go to the RIGHT DRUG be 169 W and 1111 big fie nt you a ea 3 If you are sick you cannot do bet (er than take advantage of this offer. We save you money and give the | best possible treatment. ‘LOWEST RATES To. CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES SAN DIEGO Good service, targe outside state. rooms and unsurpassed meals, Every) convenience for sengers. and full particulars at City Ticketi Office THE McCORMICK LINE® 109 Cherry st. Elttete 3438, S. S, KLAMATH.. | } 4 | | When you think think ’

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