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STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1917, PAGE 4 By the Editor of The Star LOT of folks in Seattle are deluding themselves with the idea that Germany is “all in,” and that most of the fighting America will have to do will be carried on in bank parlors, where big batches of bonds will be sold. We are not yet awake to what we are up against. ; We have not given sober consideration, for instance, to what it is going to mean to us, here in Seattle, if the kaiser’s pernicious propaganda for a separate peace with Rus- sia should result successfully. ‘Thousands of skilled agents of Prussianism are working night and day, sowing seeds of discord in the new and as yet unstable republican gov- ernment of Russia. If they succeed, what happens? For one thing, the vast overseas com merce between Seattle and Vladivostok which constitutes a mighty factor in this city’s war prosperity, probably would terminate most suddenly. And Germany, with Russia's vast supply thus opened to her, and with the military strain on her eastern front relieved, could keep up the fight for years. It would mean that not a half million, but ITHE SEATTLE STAR | 1307 Seventh Ave. Near Union St. | | | MEMBER OF SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSrarEens Telegraph News Service Press Assoctation Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice as Second-Class Matter, By mali, out of city, 35¢ per month up 98; year & By carrter, city pa a | Mata 600, Private =. | 1 TURKISH TROOPS In Bertin en route to the Flanders front? | Must have “falien back to more favorable positions” from Gaza. (Rake ile cara mena test hessetiates Te die mast The Back-Fire Squad Here are a few plain facts for intelligent Americans: Every day, while this war lasts, thousands of helpless s in Belgium, Serbia, and the invaded regions of France will be starving to death. Every day the misery and suffering of millions will grow worse. Every average day about 5,000 will be kifled or wound- sed on the western battle front alone. Every day that we hasten the sending of American Mroops to Europe cuts off a day of the war. Perhaps it cuts off more than that. Tt isn’t the deadly execution they will do. It isn’t the idea that they will descend upon the hostile warriors and eat ’em alive. It is the tremendous moral force, greater than all armies, that lies in the notice to the world that we are not a nation of boobs, we are not obliged to let _ others do our fighting, we are not in this war with dollars alone, but with the full strength of 110,000,000 people. Facing these facts, the half witted and the half hearted, -in congress and out, want to waste time over a back-fire lecheme to wait for a volunteer army. 4 At the present rate of enlistment it will take six years to raise an atmy of 1,500,000 men. That's all ; The same order of mind demands that no i troops now ready shall be sent to Europe. 1 The Swift, Stiff Punch does the business. Universal military training and meantime the American t regulars to Europe. That is the way to end the war and | free the world from the horror and blight of it. American AT SAN DIEGO they've arrested, as a German spy, Rudolph G. Be- *hagle Von Flammerdinghe They ain't sure what's spied, but he , Sure sounds German, Victory for Uncle Sam ' ‘ Oh, say! the United States supreme court acts {were going to enlist, without waiting to be “specifical + scripted.” It has handed over to Uncle Sam, for the raising , of war beans, onions, potatoes and such, the millions of acres *of Oregon and California lands claimed by the railroads.- If this decision isn’t patriotic, what is? The United +States supreme court has our permission to remain seated while we whistle “The Star Spangled Banner.” as if it y con- TAKE A olip of blue Iitmus paper and stick two-thirds of It In a slit in your garden. If, in 30 minutes, the color changes to pink, you’ve got acid in your soil and bate In your belfry if you don't spade in some lime. AMERICANS CHEWED up $185,000,000 worth of candy sweets last year, not counting the eweets in plug tobacco, Great chance, here, for a war saving. STAR BEAMS ...ByE. D. K. Having come out for conscrip- An occasional washing {n sage tion of men as|tea will prevent a awitch from! the democratic |turning gray | ee QUESTIONS ASKED E., D. K.: | Does a lawyer have to take an oxamination and American method, the Seat tle Times may also come out for} conscription of money. see tice on a lawn tennis court?—W. L. B Can you tell me how to tan a ‘HE WAS THRU BEFORE HE| banana skin?—T, L. 8. STARTED Why is It that one end of a | bridge 1s on one aide of the canal jand the other end on the other | side, altho the bridge crosses the canal?—R, P, G, oe 8 WH@ WAS HI8 TAILOR? | The bride was gowned in cream silk—tint and mode befitting her | personal charms and natural grace, The groom was dressed in a manly » | pnide that so goodly a heritage had Beward, Alaska-—Emile Ander-| come to him.—Beulah (Mich.) Rec fon was sentenced to 30 days in ;ond. Jail and it took him 34 days to get | - # * there. | IN THESE GOOD OLD DAys “ee | “Do you object to a man who HOUSEHOLD HINTS | eats on‘ons?”’ It you cannot afford a fire exti “Yes,” replied Mias Cayenne, “I guisher for your auto, carry a [very much dislike any ostentation jeaicy dill pickle, of wealth.” eee before he can prac-| ten million men from the United States would have to be fed into the maw of war. -It would mean that every family in which there is an able-bodied male of military age would have to yield him up to our country. It would mean that we—all of us—would be called upon to do our “bit.” RUSSIA, AWAY. rO US IN NATIONS UNITED IN T DEMOCRACY THAT MAKE PEACE, THE WOULD FALL UPON U YET SO CLOSELY ARE KAISER’S SEATTLE, SEEMS FAR HE ALLIED HIS WAR FOR WORLD IF RUSSIA SHOULD IRON HAND S ALL. We like to think that Germany is already tot- tering, but is she? What basis is there collapse? for this talk of German Germany is feeling the pinch of hunger, and will continue to draw her belt until the next har- vest. ties. But the idea that mean the end of war is Germany is also having financial difficul- hunger and bankruptcy based on nothing except hope and the desire to shirk. , Germany's plight today is nothing to com- pare with the condition of the Southern Confed- eracy in July, 1863. The Confederacy put up its most terrific fight after that date, and for 18 months, after all hope of victory was gone, held its enemies at bay. “BAMBI” - - (Continued From Our Last leeue) It was five o'clock when they crew into Grand Central station, 4 time when the whole duty of man/| teems to be to get out of New York and into the suburbs. | | Where aro we gotng?” Jarvis asked with childlike confidence hat she would know erey Park. We'll put up jat rs We'll act rich and take a taxi” | She ordered the driver to go down the avenne slowly, and as he |Jolted around the crowded corner |of Forty-second Street, onto the }smooth asphalt, Bamb! leaned for | ward eagerly | “Good eventng, home of the books,” she nodded to the Library. ; “Good evening, Mra. New York, and) all you people there! We're pad | Jarvis and 1” | Bambi was ont of bed and at her Window the next morning early “Spring tn the city,” breathed | Bambi. “Spring tn New York.” She was tempted to run down t Jarvis’ door and to drink it In too, but she remem |bered that Jarvis did not care for! [the flesh-pote, so she enjoyed her earty hour alone. Many a gay-hearted gtrl has sat, | as Bambi sat, looking off over the use tops in t ful Nonsense, ireams of conquest and sv pli ed a campaign for Jar. jyis. She would go first to Belasco | j with his play. Mr. Belasco would recefve him at once, recognize & master mind, and accept the play after an itmmoediate hearing. Of; | course Jarvis would insist on read: | Ing his play aloud, so that Mr. Belasco might get clearly. He would come a thousand dollars ad in his pocket, and then would | leliclous excitement of re! |sals, in which she would help |saw Jarvia before the curtain mak-| ing a firet-night’s speech. A brit |Mant series of pictures followed, | | with the Jarvis Jocelyns as central figures, surrounded by the wealth | and brains of New York, London, Parts! So absorbed was she tn her mov-| ing pletures that Jarvis’ rap) | sounded to her like a cannon shot. “Yea? Who ia it?” eho called | “Jarvis,” he answered. “Are you| she prevart-| cated. “Walt for me in the | ibrary.” | She plunged into her tub and! |donned her clothes tn record time. | | Fortunately, Jarvis did not fret | lover her tardiness. He was lost in| an article on the drama in a cur- rent magazine. “Good mc quoth Bambi, witching. “This man has no standards at| all,” he replied, out of the maga | zine | She qnietly closed It and took it from him. “I prefer to test the breakfas' standards of this club,” she w, my lege lord,” diant, fresh, be- laughed. “Did you sleep?” she added. “I always sleep.” “Let's play today,” she added, over the coffee cups. | "Yes. Wo've | where together I've put] eside an appropriation for amuse |ment. I say we draw on that to day.” a “All right. Where shall we go?" | “Let's go on top of the stage to Claremont for lunch, and then we might seo some pictures this after noon, dine here, and the theatre to- | night.” | “Had it all thought ont, did you?” “What would you plan?” she in quired. | “We will do my way tomorrow, and your way today,” he sald. At Claremont, Bambi ordered a most enticing repast, and they were very gay. Everybody seemed gay, too, The sun shone, the early spring alr was soft, and a certain gala “stolen sweets” air of Clare mont made it seem their most inti mate meal, fverybody emiled at Bambt and she smiled back “Do you know next table? “Which one?” “The fat one, who 1s staring so,” been any-| the man at the | wh | baby There is no reason to believe the Germans have any less grit or determination. “Oh, no. I thought you meant the one who lifts his giass to me every time he drinks.” Jarvis pushed back bis chair furtoualy “I will smash his head,” ho said, rising. “Jarvis! Sit down! You silly) thing! He's only tn fun, It's the spirit of the place.” “I won't have yon toasted by strange men,” be thundered. “All right. I'll make a face al him next time,” she sald, sooth logiy; but somewhere, down tn th depths of her being, where he: ° ancestor lurked, she was pleased. As they finished thelr coffee, Hambi pieked up the check, which the walter laid beside her plate. “Do you mind my paying it? Would you rather do it?” “Certainly not. It's your money. Why ebould I pretend about ttt She could have hugged him for it Instead, she overfeed the walter, Downtown they went, to Wash was adventure, They the quiet of the green, rangle into A narrow street, swarm ing with life. Innumerable shriek children, every ® and running at games, Fat re and babies | along the cw bargaining with | Pusheart n A wheering hurdy gurdy, with every other note gone to the limbo of lost chords, ranped leas All the on the windows—not even an “English spoken bere” sign. The fresh wind blew down the dirty street, and »pered everything with dust Newspapers Increased thoir oir culation tn a most Irritating map her under foot. The place was hideous, lifting {ts raucous ery to the fatr spring aky Jarvis looked at Bambi, silenced for once. Her face rexistered a loud protest. A woman passed close, with a covered with great sores. Hamb! caught at Jarvis’ sleeve and tottered a step. “I feel a Mttle sick,” she faltered. Ho caught her hand thru hia arm, and hurried her quickly back IT WORKS WELL A Combination That Is Doing an Immense Amount of Good This Spring superlative blood-purifying medicine like Hood's Sarsapariila, taken before meals, combined with & superlative tron tonic like Pept- fron Pills, taken after meals, makes the ideal course of Spring Medicine. No other medicines possess such curative properties as these two great restoratives working to- gether. They reach the impure, impover- hed, poisoned, devitalized blood, and the worn, run-down, overwork- od, exhausted system. They awaken the appetite, ald digestion, purity and vitalize the blood, give renewed strength to the whole body, produce sound, natural sleep, and a com- plete restoration to good health, the greatest of ail earthly blessings It fs said that $2 invested in these two medicines will bring better re- sults than $4 spent in other treat- ment, it will be wise to get Hood's Sareaparilia and Peptiron Pills to- day. —THE— BANK OF CALIFORNIA NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SAN FRANCISCO A NATIONAL BANK Member of Federal Reserve Bank Oapttal aed Surplus $16,800,000.00 SEATTLE BRANCH +O1 Second Ave, mC. WAGNER OHO. T. 8. WHITH Manager see Anat. Mer. At that time the South, with only 5,000,000 white population, had enl ly one out of every eight. numbered three or four to one. ed in a blockade compar isted 600,000 men, near- At the front she was out- She was enmesh- ed to which the present blockade of Germany is a sieve. She had scarcely an —hardly any iron and y industrial organization no coal. Her railroads were few and wore out rapidly, with no facilities for repair or replacement. ulation of 3,000,000 to b appeared early in poor, 1863, There was a slave pop- e kept quiet. Food riots Food was scarce and Admittedly bankrupt, her paper money was worthless, and supplies were taken for the army without pretense of payment in any kind of cur- rency. Over a third of the hands of the enemy, her best territory was in and what remained was cut half in two by the surrender of New Orleans, Memphis, Vicksburg, and sissippi river. GERMANY TODAY AS MANY MEN IN SOUTH. SHE PROBAT LION RESERVES. HE MOST UNTOUCHED B HAS THREE ALLIES, the opening of the Mis- ‘ HAS NOT ENLISTED PROPORTION AS THE 3LY HAS OVER A MIL- R TERRITORY IS AL- Y THE INVADER. SHE With Austria, her mid-European territory is probably the best organized and equipped industrial unit in the world, and she is rich in coal and iron. Her armies are not greeter than two to one. [the way they had coma As they | mounted the stage, be looked at | her white face “We will for you, Mis | “No, no. ¢ to expurgate life Mite.” IT want it all, I must get hardened.” Back at the clad, Into ber hot bath, with a rague hope of washing off all traces of that awful street. But thelr talk at @nner was desultory and rath serious. Jarvis talked for the most part, elaborating schemes of suctel reform and the handling of oor immigrant brothers. They started off to the theatre, with no doefinte plan. Bambi's | spirits rose to the Mghts of Broad: way, like & trout to a silver shiner. | There Froadway, a personification of the | “Eat, drfnk and be merry, for to | morrow we may die” spirit which | like champagne, or | | warms you, chile you, ike the fey hand of despair, according to your mood. Bambl skipped along beside Jar twittering gayly. People are happy, aren't they?” Surface veneer.” Jarvs, you olf bocte-man, hiding in the dark, to jump out jand say “Roo!’ ” | “That's my work—bootng frands Let's go fn here.” he added “"Damaged Goods," Bambt read on the theatre poster. “Do you | know anything about It? “I've read it It is not amusing,” jhe added Bambi came to tt with an open | mind. She had heard of Brieux, | hfs dramatic tracts, but she had not seen the text of this play, nor wan she prepared for it. The first act horrified her {nto aflence dur ing the whole intermission. The |wecond act racked her with robs, and the lact act plied up the agony to the breaking point. They made | their way ont to the street, part of that quiet audience which scarcely | spoke, so deep was the impression of the play “The veneer {s all rubbed off. 1 ean see only bones,” she said, and caught her breath fn a sob. Jarvis awkwardly took her hand and patted ft. “Life has beaten me raw today.” she answered him, with a shadowy smile, CHAPTER It The day which Bambi foretold would some thne be famous tn his tory dawned propitiously, with sun and soft airs, A sense of excite ment got them up early. Break fant was over, and Jarvis ready for action, by elghty-thirty. “I don't believe Mr. Belasco wil! be down this early, Jarvis,” Bambt nald “Woll, he {s a busy man. He'll probably get an early start 1 want to be on the ground when he arrives, anyhow. If he should want me to read the play this morning, wo should need time.” She made no more objections. She straightened his tie, and brushed his coat, with shining eyes, full of excitement. Jarvis had carefully looked up the exact location of the Belasco Theatre. Ho decided to walk up- town, in order to arrange his thoughts, and to make up his mind Just how much and what he would say to Mr. Belasco. Tha stir, the people, the nolse and the roar were unseen, unheard, He strolled along, towering above the crowd, a biond young Achilles, with many fn admiring eye in his wake. None of the perquisites of suc- $100 Bond Investments Can be purchased on our Partial payment plan, Your Savings Can Hera WITH ENTIRE sArerTY BOND DEPARTMENT Guardian Trust & Savings Bank Cor, First Ave. at Columbia St. she hurried | te aw heetic joyousness on outnumbered in a ratio Her communications are THIS IS NOT A “NICE WAR” NOR A “BANKERS’ WAR” WE ARE IN FOR Southern Confederacy Fought On for Eighteen Months in Much Worse Condition Than Germany Is In Now almost perfect, and she t “short haul” between all the fighting points. There is every reason to believe that the vast majority of Germans believe that their cause is just, altho the world has condemned it. The world had rendered its verdict against the Confederacy, but its people believed they were right. There may be discontent among the Ger. man poor, but for three years before Appomattox the sentiment that this is a poor man’s fight” was federacy. ° Probably the wiser Germans know that their that All the intelligent people of the South knew after Gettysburg that their “cake was dough,” to use the phrase that they fight is hopeless. But they are ready to quit. themselves employed, but went thru to the bloody finish. Germany is not going to surrender. Rather she is probably ready to fight a new and greater Wilderness campaign over successive lines of trenches back to the Rhine itself. We are not in for a banker’s war, nor a training camp war, Old Glory will wave victorious in the end but, like all victorious battle flags, every stitch of silk may be soiled with the blood, grime, sweat and grease which are the essence of that most elemental of all things—WAR. By Marjorie Benton Cooke (Copyright, Paget Newspaper Service) | cons, so dear to Bambi's dreams |®vpealed to him. He saw himself | Uke John the Baptist, crying ir jthe wilderness, which was the | world, and all the people, in all the | cities, were roused out of their lethargy and dull submission at his call—not to prayer, but to thought It was a great mission he was japon, and even Broadway became consecrated ground. He walked far beyond the crose street of the | theatre tn his absorption. so it was exactly half-after nine when he «r- | ftved at the box office. “I want to speak to Mr. Belasco,” he sald to the man there. “Three fights up.” “Is there an elevator?” “Naw” He resented the man's grin, but | be made no reply. He began to eiimd the long filghts of dark staira, Arrived at the top, the doors were all locked, no he was forced to descend again to the bor office oe is nobody up there,” he sald, | “Yon didn't expect anybody to be | there at this hour of the dawn, did | rou?” “What time does Mr. Belasco | neually come?” jhim. He In Mable to land here any }time between now and midnight, | if he comes at all.” | “He doesn't come every Gay, | then? The man grinned. “Say, you're new to this game. ain't you? Sometimes he don show up for days. The steno can tell you whether he !s coming to- day.” “The steno?” “Yes. The skirt that’s tn his of. fice.” “When does she come?’ “Oh, about ten or eleven.” “Thank you.” “Don't mention it.” Jarvis made the ascent again | He stood about for nearly an hour | before the office girl arrived “Those stairs are the limit,” she gasped. “You waiting for me?” “Tl am waiting for Mr. Belasco.” “Ohl Appotntment?” “No.” “Got a letter from him?” “What do yon want to see him about? A job?” “No, About a play.” She ushered him in, opened the windows, took off her hat, looked | at herself in the mirror, while she patted her wonderful hair. powdered her nose, fixed her neck ruffle, apparently oblivtous of Jarvis, “What time do you expect Mr. Belasco?” “Goodness only knows.” “Do you think he will come to- Far be It from me to say.” “But I wish to see him.” “Many a blond has twirled his thumbs around here for weeks for the same reason.” “But Iam only tn New York for a little while.” “I should worry,” sald she, open- ing her typewriter desk. “Give me your play, I'll see that ft gets to him.” I'd rather talk to him myself.” “Suit yourself.” sufpose I can walt here?” “No charge for chairs,” said the cheerful one. An hour passed, broken only by the click of the typewriter, Con- ventional overtures from the cheer. ful one being discouraged, she smashed the keys in sulky silence. From eleven to twelve things were considerably —_ enlivened, Many sleek youths, of a type he had seen on Broadway, arrived, They salut- ed the cheerful one gayly as “Sally” and indulged in varying de- groes of witty persiflage before the inevitable “The Governor in?” “Nope.” “Expect him today?” “I dunno.” “Billy here?” “Dunno” “Thank you, little one.” Sometimes thoy departed, some- times they joined Jarvis’ waiting party. Lovely ladies, and some not so lovely, Old and young, fat and thin, th climbed the many stairs and met thelr disappoint ment cheerfully, They usually fell upon Jack, or Billy, or Jim, of the | “There ( nothing usual abont | She | waiters, who, in turn, fell Belle, or Susan, or Fay. “What are you with? How's busines: were always the first tions, followed by shop talk, gible to Jarvis. One youth said that be had been to this ce ten successive mornings without ketting an appointment. The others laughed, and one woman boasted that she had the record, for she had gone twenty-eight | times before she sw Frohman, the |last engagement she sought. “But he engaged me the 29th,” she laughed. They impressed Jarvis as the Lightest-hearted set he had ever en- countered. They laughed over everything and nothing. Py one o'clock Jarvis and the cheerful one | were again in sole possession. eee you ever eat?” she asked im. “Oh, ts ft lunch timet” he tf quired. “Come out of the trance.” She went thru the entire per- formance before the mirror, in | putting on her hat. | “Shall I bring yon anything, | dearie? she asked him, as she | completed her tollette. going, too,” he said. “TT be upon back. | He plunged down the stairs When he reached the street he |thought of Bambi's face when he| returned with the announcement | ot his futile morning. He went jinto a shop, telephoned the club that he had been detained and | Would not be back to lunch. Then | he foraged for food and went back |to his sittimg on the top floor of | the Belasco, | “Well, little stranger,” said the | cheerful one, on her return | His interest in the afternoon |eallers waned. At five o'clock he | gave it up. He arranged with his new friend to call her up in the morning to see if she had any news from the front. Then he slowly turned bis footsteps toward the club. | His matin concern .was Bambi's disappointment. She had sent him out with mfch high hopes—she would receive him back with his | Big Chief feathers drooping. He | was sorrier than he would admit to | drown the shine in her eyes. He | walked down town to postpone the | evil hour, but in the end it had to be faced After Jarvis had departed on his conquering way, Bambi turned her 1as the inside lines and a “rich man’s war and widespread in the Con. doe not mean that they set their teeth and any “nice war,” nor Save and Be Fat on This Bread Here's the Intest recipe for “war bread” which, it is elatm- ed, is more nutritious and cheaper than other breads. Gales Biron, chet of the Hotel Martinique (n New York, who planned the recipe, says the bread is eaten thru France and Insts a week before getting stale. The recipe {s: 4 ounces rye flour, 12 ounces whole wheat, 3 pounds white four, 1 ¢quart water, % ounce yeast and 1 ounce salt, attention to herself. She mates most careful toflette When she was hatted, and velled, and gloved, she tripped up and down before her mirror, trying herself out, as & were. She made several entrances into editorial sanctums. Qnee she entered haltingly, drawn to her full five-feet-one; once she bounced in, confidently, but she vetoed that, and decided upon a dignified bet correct entrance. One more trip to the mirror for a close imapeo thon. “Oh, you pretty thing!” she nod ded to herself. She set forth, as Jarvis bad done, with the adéress on the publisher's | letter clasped in her hand. She | marched uptown with a singing |peart. She saw everything and everybody. Even when a waxed and fashionable old dandy re marked, “Good morning, my dear,” she only laughed. Naturally, he | misunderstood, and fell in step be side her. “Are you alone?” he asked coyty. She gave him a direct glance }and answered seriously: “No. Iam walking with my fire ttle brothers and sisters.” He looked at her in such utter amaze | ment that she laughed again. This j time he understood. “Good day,” said he, an@ right | about-faced. | (Continued Tomorrow) | ‘ALASKA BLDG. SOLD | Seattle's oldest skyscraper, the | Alaska buikiing, has been sold dr Mrs. Maria Antoinette Evans, of Beverly, Mass., to George I, Hun tress of Poston and Rene EB. Paise of Brookline, Mass, Mrs, Evans purchased the property in 1910 for $1,500,000 ea A EUR NIT GOTTSTEIN URE GQ. | SPECIAL NOTICE For the purpose of cooperating with the will prevail until further 100.00, nothing down, 150.00, $ 5.00 down, 200.00, 10.00 down, 250.00, 12.50 down, 300.00, 15.00 down, homefurnisher during the present high cost living, the following terms on homefurnishings notice: $ 50.00, nothing down, $1.00 week, or $4.00 mo. 1.25 week, or 5.00 mo. 1.50 week, or 6.50 mo. 2.50 week, or 10.00 mo. 3.00 week, or 12.50 mo. 3.50 week, or 15.00 mo. We invite the accounts of all reputable and trustworthy homefurnishers. The GOTTSTEIN original “added-to-account™ policy will com unue as heretofore. 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