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EXTRACTION FREE DAILY ([ple}n} rfr js) TAs $5.00 $10.00 $4 GOLD CROWN BRIDGEWORK OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS 0 Years. Untversity St For That | New Home The Meyer-Toner Piano Co. 1 ar Egyptians Overcame Gray Hair Egyptian women, famous in song and story, were noted for the beauty of their hair. Their secret of youth- ful treseses is contained in BROWNATONE Tints Gray Hair Any Shade This discovery of an eminent hair specialist, combining the secrets of the Egyptians with modern science, easily tints gray, faded or bleached hair to any vs Gh pe from lightest blonde to deep brown or black. Acts instantly; fast colore thet defy detection, will not rub off. Guar. anteed Harmless. At all dealers, 50c and $1.50, Send 10c for trial bottle indicating color desired. THE KENTON PHARMACAL CO, 1500 Coppin Bldg. Covington, Ky. Safe Deposit Boxes For Rent $1.00 Per Year Win. D. Perkins & Co. 211 Cherry St. Some More Letters From Star Readers LIKED THE CARTOON pout a dosen o LOT ON A BEAUTY SPOT Dull Spotted Teeth’. Bleached White Quick — Safe Way A Gleamy Mass of Hair |: 35c “Danderine” does Wonders for Any Girl's Hair their pr rden strete f water unat b n SKAGIT STORIES URGES AID FOR great number ¢ | making orim! + | fo be cleared up promptly demand « year ogo, Woe « the private get 100 per ruct @ p t without any CARL B, LARSON y ma DRUG ADDICTS men breaking the law willfully, with out using auch methods They are filling the penitentlaries, out of people who could be respected citizens if given a chance, Many became addicted wdowr y| years ago thru doctors giv to ease pain, Now rep tors will not treat Vhen narcotic purpose, (enue and lea money would be soll or getting o " eane the supposed suffer Ian't there a large enough number of Your uid indicate that sidered the subject matter from a very narrow and personal view. needed. If rlotima were cured, ped dlers would disappear | MRS, H.R. MEADOWS. ANOTHER LETTER TO WINSLOW of compensation ¢ omen, It ie true ti part of point, increased taxation, in case the| I desire to take exoaption to your |bonus measure ts passed, would | simile, in which you comparo the |come out of the exservice man's| service men promoting the bonus | pocket, but @ goodly portion would movement to a soldier with a flock | also come from those who made hay | of medals and things (whatever they |at home, while the soldier beys, at may be), exploiting hig honor for | $43 per month abroad, made the sun |personal gain. Remember, if you |shine, please, that the majority of exwery-| Think f§ evert ico men (I am not one of the ma-| In your letter you purporl te be) jority) were oted for or inducted expressing the sentiment of an Into the service. The compensation | bonus organization, but you neglect Girls! Try thish= When comb-| of service men was by no means|to name it, This } ing and dressing your hair, Just) commensurate with the service ren-|personal, as ¥ belo: |molsten your hair brush with @ lit-| dered, when compared with tha tle "“Danderine* and brush !t/men of equal ability and education, HUGHES, through your hair. The effect \*\ emptoyed by the government in oth. vate, Company jstartling! You can do your halr/er departments, Is it unreasonable| HM, 28th Infantry, First Division j up Immediately and it will appear)to request adjusted compensation inj A BF twice as thick and heavy—a mass sk sve ead ea ONE MORE LETTER ON THE BONUS | joe sicamy hair, sparkling with life! jand possessing that ineommparabie | | softness, freshness and luxuriance. | Editor The Star: |ted them for quick transition Into While beautifying the hair “Dan-| I was much {nterested in ex-/ efficient army officers. That they derine” ts also toning and stimulat-| Lieut. Kenelm Winslow's views on | were efficient officers fs shown by | ing each single hair to grow thick,| adjusted compensation for world! thelr war records. In my humbie long and strong. Meir stops falling| war veterans as expressed in the|opinion they were the beat to be out and dandruff disappears. Getjopen letter to Dr. Jones, published | found in the allied armies. I am [a bottle of delightful, refreshing|in The Star recently. May one) proud to number several of them “Danderine” at any drug or tollet/other ex-service man express his| whom I met for the first time on counter and just see how healthy| views thru the same channel? the fighting lines in France among }and youthful your hair becomes} Mr. Winslow refers to the|my personal friends, | | Advertisement. American Legion's demand for a4- Noverthele thi lite ve! justed compensation as “exploiting een OF |the ex-service man's heritage of the | * constituted an asset that was of | to no organ: ant!- bonus. } |war for a trivial sum.” It atrikes | {valuable aid to them in the mat: | }me that exploiting is the wrong/|ter of post-war rehabilitation, In a jterm. Why not say, for instance, | few months of military service they jrealizing on it? For thus far the|had reached a standing in the bust | | If Headachy, Bilious, Sick, nous appeals to the pubso at the close of the war to help in the re-| habilitation of the ex-soldier that | |ex-service man's heritage of the war|ness and professions! world that | jis entirely on the debit side of the would have taken them years to! |ledger. It was the rather platitudl- | acquire in civilian pursuits, { The case of the man who offered | his services to his country as an| enlisted soldier is quite different. | placed us in the position of “ex-!sHis military services did not cen.| ploiting our honor for personal GET WELL THE NATURAL WAY ait Seattle's AU pus ‘condi wie ailments. All skin dis ‘aralysis, Bronchitis, Asth. rvous disorders and all weak- Hundreds are happy today because of our treatment. 20th year. Con- sultation fre . MACY hysician ve, corner Pike St, —Aavertinement PUGET SOUND | STEAMER SCHEDULES Save Money. Travel by Steamer MA Leaves Colman Dock Daily 7, 9, 11 A. Mon. and Thurs. (Goes Thru to PUGET SOUND NaVIGATIONCO COLMAN DOCK- FOOT Manion sr Puowt MAIN 2 Constipated > > a gentle liver and bowel ng with “Case "Sick he, Billousness, , Indi. | gestion, and all such distress gone by morning. tive for Men, Women and Children —10c boxes, alse nd 50c sizes, any drug store.—Advertisement. | WHY DO YOU WASH YOUR HAIR? Washing hair nowadays is more {than a matter of cleanliness for {women who want to retain their |loveliness know that correct sham. pooing brings out their hair's full beauty and keeps it healthy. It is important to know the correct method. ere ts a way that in- varidbly brings gratifying results: An expecially fine shampoo for this weather can be easily made at trifling expense by simply dissolv- ing a teaspoonful of canthrox in a cup of hot water. Pour slowly on sealp and massage briskly, This creates a soothing, cooling lather that dissolves and removes all dan- ruff, excess ofl and dirt, Rinsing leaves the scalp spotlessly clean, soft and pliant, while the hair takes on a glossy richness of natural color, also a fluffinesa which makes it seem very much heavier than it is, After canthrox shampoo ar- ranging the hair ts a pleasure—, yertisement, Most harmless laxa- | J-| equipped the mental alertness that pecullarty fit- Arctic building. gain.” We clatmed no debt of gratitude from the private’ citizenry of our country. We needed no appeal to public sympathy. What we did need was cash to enable us to get re- lestablished in civilian life, and to |help us thr the inevitable post. war depression. An unselfish partial adjustment of tho difference be- |tween the pittance we received for military service and our normal earning capacity at home would have provided this cash. I don’t believe that there is a man or woman in the United States who in their own heart will deny tho justice of this statement. Cer- tainly whenever representative | groups of the American people have |had opportunity to express their sentgnents on adjusted compensa. | tion’ | favor of it, | 1 cannot see that the fact of the |lapse of time since the close of the |war, a8 set forth by Mr. Winslow, lin any way alters this obligation. j1f members of my family lose a |thru an ordeal of somo sort and |r feel a moral obligation to reim- burse them, does that obligation cease when at the end of four years [I find them struggling along with- Jout its fulfillment? | I am quite willing to believe that jin the individual case of Mr. Wins- low the need of adjusted compensa- tion is not a factor. Nor ts it so in the case of mi more of the young officers who served in the lieve that the “imposing minority” in the Legion opposed to adjust- ed compensation referred to by Mr. Winslow is also made up of a few men of this class.) I know that most of the juntor officers with whom I came in con- tact were carning larger salaries og army officers than they could have commanded in civilian positions. Many of them enjoyed the exper- lence of earning their very first dollar during the war, Their recent college training had ith a poise and | hey have been unqualifiedly in| |large sum of money in helping me| world war. (I have been led to be-| stitute an asset on his return to/ |civillan life, The months of his} jabsence had served to diminish | rather than increase his efficiency | in his accustomed work. It is to! this man who suffered an actual | cash lors by his military service jthat we claim that the United | States owes adjusted compensation. | Mr. Winslow “resents the infer, | jence that the American Legion volces the opinion of a majority of |the ex-service men.” We all know jthat the membershi» of the Legion |does not include a majority of the jexnoldiers, It $e, however, prac tically the only organization of any jslzo purporting to represent the ex servico men at all. Whether It voices the sentiments of the major ity only be judged by individual jobaervation on the outside, By far the majority of ex-servica m out. |side the Legion whom I have met |personally were in sympathy with | {ts Work andvin favor djusted |compensation. Mr. Winslow states| jthat he met one man on a street | car who was not. | There is, I am sure, no clause in the compensation bill making {t compulsory for ex-service men to claim adjusted compensation. Jt men like Mr. Winslow foel that they do not need and possibly have not | earned adjusted compensation and, therefore cannot conscientiously | claim it they need not do so, But isn’t it a rather dog-.in-the-manger act on their part, just because they feel that they \themselves do not neod it or have not earned it, to attempt to deprive men of it who do need it and who have honestly earned it? EDMUND BELL, Bremerton, Wash. (One-time Private, Co, M, 125th Int) A balance of $7.31 remaing in tho treasury of the disbanded Ninety- First division, World War Veterans, and @ meeting has becn called by Lieut, Gov. Wee Coyle to determine what Is to be done with it. 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