The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 8, 1919, Page 15

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THE SEATTLE STAR.—MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1919. ait i 9 j - \ ALLIES POUNDING ON DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Tipping Off the Bride-to-Be. —By ALLMAN 4 | WAs JusT over T TRY OW | You MusT BE A 1M JUST Havin Four Deesses Show You Tue ANO You'Re GuIG To MaKe | weu.r Course sau UsuacN @Gu0 NRO Wonoer MY WEDDING GOWN AND VERY HAPPY GIRL mMaoe Now AND 1 CAN ‘G000s for it~ mt IT ALL Yovasese? t | DON'T Kwowt | BEFORE You ARE MARRIED AND SEEDS Ll q ! TELL Me Ape > \ ye Q ‘ “ont fs suet vewoeneus! ee LAL Ge A covere more Laree| INS TP PANS IF GeoRGe WILL expect me 7 buT 5 APTERWARO, ANO LET You PLANT THEM Pacigh Bhat dra Le OM = LeY me see - TO MAKE MY DeRSts AFTER. Vy } | Your. New DRESS, ELE. WE ARE MARRIED? 7 ( q gl ——— — i Y Cp S 4 ‘ ‘< 4 —SAYS_LUDENDORFF “MY THOUGHTS AND ACTIONS” , By Gen. Eric Von Lundendorff with the M The fifth ac Flanders (the and some Frer terrible. In a ything possible e advanced x0: east of Ypres Was good tiveness of # never imagined before the war, wer t; and we eti reserve hurled upon the bodies of men/the third Who passed ar able oxister Woe knew that the enemy scattered about ud-filled 5 heavily, But we also knew holes ex dinarily strong and. what 1 a e horror of the shell hole are®! was equally important, had an ¢x of erdun was surpassed. It was tra i a y stubl w Lioyd peakable suffer thru ich i aap: WEDLOCKED Peter Saw Only Part of This Act. FE world of mud the attackers dra not know: how lone) Ca ay ie alee ae EF Mremseives, siowly but stead ee Oe wll | MR PAL- | HANE f Pere iT sAvs IN | fn denne maneen, Cauicht In he ae A COUPLE OF i i} t Was WA g)| TH Programme Rranced sore by our hail < the 5 hel attached. sind bth OT f MAT TH’ HEAD DRESS| ften collapsed, and the lonely man| , 7 ramihrenegeringes rod Ee aorade: Papiaatd tT WL , 4 HA | MLEFE FE wore in the shell hole breathed again +p: omg Armd ae HERE THAT ( ae | A i; A ap | Cost J Then the mass came on again. | °° a 2 hus _ m CANNOT USE - | | THANK You } ui y Rifle and machine gun jammed in| Of Mon. known as the Laffaux cor | lat louGut THAT Bd only too often t eter MiGHT — ‘Oo LIKE measures 1 was sup What the German soldier experi-| Piet with | everytt enced. acti and suffered in the Flanders battle will be his everiast ing monument of bronze, erected by | '"* himself in the ¢ The enemy's losses heavy. When we Heficld, in the sp: countered the he many und there in t success, It made = land ts with meticulous same, § nation of th aint AVY BLOW lay BY FRENCH The French attack on October 2% them were enemies [was successful. One division suc man ne who had found a hero's) cumbed to the effeets of an ex grave there. tionally heavy gas bombardment, ane yet - ooapylled pygon oath and gave way before the hostile as fertain units no longe sant enemy advanced toward over the demoralizing effects of the |*)" c “ defensive battle as they had done for. |)" sar phone ge erp: merly. This force rder its ncua ENEMY CHARG tion, and waa withdraw LIKE WILD BU behind the OlseAisne Canal. The | FRECKLES om: |losses were very serious: once mor ease again |several divisions were destroyed. The en This with awal of ' Yes, It Looks That Wau. —By BLOSSER DONT KNOW ENOUGH 2 Nou DONT HAVE To KNow On October 26 and 30 and Ne ber 6 and 10 the fighting w wf the severest description emy charged like # wild bul! against | itably enta the iron wall which kept him from | ( jour submarine bases. Hoe threw his red, and carried out on ther weight against Houthulst Forest, of the IxteInd November, after th Poelcapell, Passchendacte, Becelaere, | stores and equipment had been re Gheluveit and Zandvoorde (along the moved. In itself was of no cor Hine of hilis from the northeast to sequence whether we stood north or the southeast of Ypres. Had Hale | south of the Allette, t éfter hav inken these hills, the Germans would | ing fought all thru the # Ppmave had no good lin f defense to! possession of the ¢ ‘prevent the outflanking of their post-| it was very diffic Hiong along the Belgian coast and| pe given up. To t owever : th ager — He dented it | would only have involved continu:| © he must knock it down. But it held, | °C ""*"\6 altho faint tremor ran thru its . foundations, The impressions I received contin SAV! WuaTcHAa LAFFIN' AT, YA Now wily 1 GONNA Do ALEK? ~QuiT WINN, How CN You BE A SCHOOL 4 the eva emin des Dames ridge w WAFTA Do IS ASK Questions ! - WaT ARE NA GONNA D0- GET A JoB C, sone LACE? Da to order it to hold on, pus (between ® on toward the canal 4 Alene rivers) the enemy gained fur but later qn all his Ln ae att eh curl nd toward As at Verdun in August, the WCMAN GAINED ‘rench, supported by remarkable masses of artillery, had fought very vigorously tired western divisions by strong] eastern ones in the enst, and | M Virginia Stapp Hadn't 107th division, which had entrained in the east about the middie of Seen a Well Day im vember. was tatended for the neiah || KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES Twenty-five Years borhood of Cambrai troops had just arrive TR ASGINIS, YOU ARE SUMMONED HERE TO Do Ry DUTY IN A MOST IMPORTANT CASE' Oise - THESE FOUR "REDS OR ANARCHISTS ARE ACCUSED OF SHOOTING DOWN OuR SOLDIER BoyS IN COLD BLOOD WHILE THEY PARADED IN THE YES- NOW DO YOU THINK You COULD SIT ON THIS SURY AND GIVE THESE MEN 4 FAIR AND SQUARE DEAL? “It's the honest truth, I hadn't geen a well day in twenty-five years until I started taking Tan- jac, but now al! my troubles are gone and I feel like a young girl ILL GIVE 'Em Just as Faire An’ SQUARE 4 DEAL AS THEY GAVE ’ of darkn Havrincourt Wood, the ad, dur ral nights, con centrated a erable number of a again,” was the statement made by ; t A oe “ nks and cavalry divisions between I a gia ifrom Bapaume and Peronne. On the| For the past twenty-five years) noening of the 20th, after a sh j “i have bee such miserable | a ny | a een . [heavy bombardment, they advanced aes continued Mrs. Stapp, “that |i tie attack | M was foegining to think I wouid| rig “ ice to be content and bles my! LY SENDS as I tive 1 had e at all and when |, The ts obs! - 1 manag few bites 1) trenches, a od the < csaet ¢ woulda |th? infantry and cavalry f “ | When, soo: after $$ a. m, I spoke ; — pe kad ng Myre waa Tl with the chief of staff of the Second e could get no gth or nourish fg perry theme it tment 1 fell off twenty-five pounds} already broken into our line at J a Pet oe — veral points. I at once ordered y ere Anat t woult ral divisions which © more c wn and wait ti or leas rested, in rear of t a pean aves. Wier tine of the German crown prir s ears I ¥ “ rallied to the neighborh brai and south of it, a the group of Prince move forces to the nort brai. General yon Ku to be withe had terrib neys ar ae _ AMO AND ACFOSS TH car for the Fourth arm ing about th my front e battie on the $ a 1 and tossir aff ao t for a unit ¢ ain § E SKIDDED WERE TO AUSTRALIA ("to THERE KANG. KEEPING YoU ou TW HOP | : Tquir.. toe POET yy no t same t 4 . © T= VILL Go W'RE aaa a It va o the ¢ LYOU 10 MILE! ame ou ME WEA HEM sining static where train ave page ane Rae EV pets Dees RT" \ 0 =? tL STOP | p mind to g i an only follow \— @ trial, but as rything -¢ t definite inter . W tad taken for ty-five ar normal dura had failed to b I had to be added faith in uC ir, it t to all tt lo it generally took tw to help 80 that it or three days for a, division, using fio time before I had chang « 30 trains, to reach its desti mind about it now I th natic It could seldom be done in fs the greatest medicine I have ever heard of in my life. I can erdiy realize what a wonderful| not reach Cambrai by train be The first reinforcements could re Bhange has come over me. Why, 1|the morning of the 21st; not. until cat just anything I 244 would sufficient troops be" sich LTE ME OH. BOF NIE = ith nm t 1 the ted to oppo the attac The| — ee r a aa " nt sie eaaais . r * Our exianatior ' “th to el i — — _ ~ - i 5 possible, to take the English attackyrate at Jast an offensive on the, quiet period, which our exhaustion | th the navy, or to curtail | we - ‘ m weight. 1 haven't | troor 48 NOW much fé easy to make; but in|chief of staff of the Second army, | superve at last in the west |sako of the latter yee SE HER kes ace fad a headache or dizzy rpell in| «pp MADE ME caitlin a | Edel Oot, Rteeprt ana’ the aneteyl. rt ; nl ae d . could you spare Os Bagge | 7 7 a wa 4 ? a and ne on entente offensive to 2 =n i “ | poor guy 18 cente? fo lone ha a I alm for-| VERY ANXIOUS” Uittieuit in the | weat je| of the commander had earned their| which we were intended to succumb dee Hoagie te ire beara saath? ai-Way ih coated Potten about them he pains ir Jassembling of the troops, their dis:| just reward. ‘The success was the|in 1917 } anh: GOT ce eee | Saat do. Sane Sny back have left me entirely. My It was not until noon that I o v 4 7 had petered ou - Bum—Just to forever dispose ot oe task ye lett mm entirely. My jit We, Bok ia meen: at 2) * powal for attack, and bringing up| more remarkable because it was in|the Russian revolution there had| Reading often makes a man tattl the Seana haluaeatiniee Fey = a in One Day lived and ray. tovigne is never aA th em ucece It ent of!the huge quantities of ammunition|the main achieved by halt-tired heen no concerted action. When the| of words that he cannot pronounce. untucke, wed and ogue Is never coat-) the enemy's succers, It made melrequired take time. In the mean ‘ps who had not been speclally| Angio.rrench-Italian advance Ww Svcd) ber sce Na <i TE CA Nate ae a os any te. tT slecn |however, was nlrendy being maible.| while, the wefense itself consumes | trained for attack |made Russla fell out, and when Rus: | c in my mouth ; pwever, wa dy being done.! troop | There was only one serious fe%| Kin took the offensive the western af Po 6 SiaES ME bi ee HARD |ture, The success had not been #8) front had weakened, We had held do my housewor' to take their course y lcomplete as it might have been, be- |.” vil yal just fe fine all the time The English army commander did) BLOW EN RETURN P ut, thou we had suff j a good division, instead of |; Gn the eastern front we had ped to go thru an) caw pressing on, ste In order to tntroduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest At other points the English and if uccess, The military | and strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; | ite this n energy about not exploit his great initial suce won © notabl * French armies undertook nothing of aver | ope 4 phe oy seni pA fin crcr Meade he been 3a | importance, Inthe reetitrant if our my supply depot. | collapse of Russia was patent to the} you can bite corn off the cob; guaran | Siieen the greatest blessing of had done #0, what would have been 8°. the fighting died down without | GOT ¢ Bes erden say Weg Os" yo pnp alae on the Italian cam. ‘2 ¢™ployment of excessive num | HIN The submarine campaign had ac- EXAMINAT aniac is sold in Seattle by Bartell | paign? bers on our part | The English brought up reserves | complished much; according to mere | $15.00 Sct of Teeth vat STE coe tus cicconst #: |" Teas was the. oot Gf war we had the evening of the 29th the|and counter attacked. The battle] numbers more, but in its final result $10.00 Set Whalebone ‘Teeth... ” special Tanlac represen.|to wage against the world, Ar 4 commander of the Second army, Gen | went on until December 5, and dur-| less, than had been anticinated. I $8.00 Crowns . Tablets da ead tation’ db taus, the bite if von der Marwitz, had colle |ing its course we regained a good | till hoped that the expectations of $8.00 Bridgework ms ost Ler tn gh abernein ete Ge snoush trope for pounter attack deal of the srofind we baa tont andthe navy wold be realized in the $2.00 Amalessh FUN ; .B1.co ne main effort was to be made on| some new ground as we @ had | wm s EK and on the 23d, on the line Moeuvres tne southern part of the battlefield, oan a odin tech vietory over a con But 1 began to wonder whether as All work guaranteed for 15 years. Have son hacmlagiens Sl in tho Be sure you get the Gen " = How ee nay tah Yoyelles— in the direction of Bauteux and| siderable part of the British army. | many U-boats nx possible were really sar nmnion Sind Fad saving free, | Look for this signature - ay me ’ " fis val vines Which Gouzeaucourt, while subsidiary at-| It was a good ¢ to the ex-| being built. It was imperative that Most of our present patronage ~ ” ystah pres) Nig hy oe ey bg ng was S h ate west of Bour-| tremel: pre aN rs ' ott af y gh Prater m i to a pe Ae . wease, work te still Crs oo Pye sk 0 is ae J Mm, ANG £0 ¢ * lon in a direct southerly direction rt t rm ous valuable i. the -effect o ne ubmarine | ed of work, ms flee, be eu. oa new Y arrived 107th infantry divis- ‘Thin tir, the lish were sur ey 4 offensive battle in the wit, campaign. It jx true that, in view |7U SF im the right place, Bring this ad with you, a ag, ee, io’ 0 its Intervention the carly) prised, Our attack on the 40th was|if we wished to undertake one im] of the anxious military and economic | Open Sundays From ® to 12 for Working People DROPS k to the enemy's attack 4s) well supported by artillery and suc-| 1918. situation, general headquarters was storsCOUGHS iy uc {Seaded, though rot quite aw sats hol "Neither, ie Mrigtah nop MRM aint tae sreltui fi samion aed OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS on the-box, 3p | it was immediately decided, if/f had hoped. But it was at any French attacked again in France, A’ workmen to any great extent from 207 UNIVERSITY gt, Opposite Fraser-Paterson Ca

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