The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 5, 1917, Page 6

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STAR—TUESDAY, JUNE 5, Oppressed Nations Send Thanks to Young y Hurrying to the Rescue Member of the Ror forth. | | mm t of olty, one year, menthe By COLYUM red at Seattle, W: ond mee F) f (From the Toronto Star) A Don't-be-Dirty shower and Hard Times party was re cently given for a bride, when everything that could be thought of in the way of clean sers was given the bride-to-be, The Seattle Star |»: 3 |" Es ID, Iie's A New York Sun sport writer “It is more precious that this America should live than that we Americans) )\\°" \ork A ehh should live,” exclaimed Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the interior, in an address at yours ago, discovered that Hilly Washington yesterday. pool and. billiard when he It is this inspired thought that today guides the steps of millions — of OUNY Was thru playing Americans to the registration places, there to declare their readiness to for} edi Gleaner tian ie America their most SELECT SERVICE, their very lives. If we had been slow in the realization of the war are come face to face with its meaning—and well may that brought us to arms. Again, let us quote from Secretary Lane's address: y p | “Why are we fighting Germany? The brief answer is that ours is a war of self-defense. The invasion of Belgium, which opened the war, led to the invasion of the United States by slow, steady, logical steps. Our love of fair play ripened into alarm at our own peril. : . A “We talked in the language and in the spirit of good Yaith and sincerity, as honest men talk, until we discovered our talk was construed as cowardice. AND MEXICO WAS CALLED UPON TO COW US. “We talked as men would talk who hope for honest agreement, not for war, until we found that the treaty torn to pieces at Liege was but the symbol of a policy that made agreements worthless against a purpose that knew no word but success.” ; - The cunning machinations of the Bernstorffs within our own borders, the in- —— room ball today we situation before, the events we sum up trigue of the Zimmermans in Mexico, in Japan, aye, in Russia, the conscienceless THE BANKS AND THE CITY : ~ : . - » Hohen “ HALL WERE CLOSE scheming of German diplomacy to bring world conquest to the Hohenzollerns, MEN on s legal toliday, One le it has menaced gal holliday to rest fr mand I are suppose nur usual toll, and de ACED THE VERY EXISTENCE OF THESE UNITED STATES, as the rest of civilization and humanity. 1917. PAGE 6 Americans Toda 1 \ Today, Regi » the liberation of the nation | resentative men of the world, and particularl ‘ nalized by the national army tration D enrollmen that i a Former Pupil of Cardinal Mercier.) To the Belgians the entrance of | the | BELGIUM ° “¢@ BY REV. J. F. STILLEMANS | | comaser of the Beigian Bureau, | United States of America into the war means infinitely more than the addition of a po " ally. It means Belgium's dica tion against those who tried to ca uminate her The Belgian heart i# filled with gratitude. Henry Van Dyke char actorintically that “in Bel-| gium, it is enough for say, ‘I come from America to be received with friendly and thankful looks. Tho little children smile and the tears run down the old peo ple's cheeks.” ways man to Helgium feels that her caus now fully judged by the ¢ American people and—thru Ar |lea—by the whole civilized world | Editor’s Mail | vote welves to w ever dut | Our danger was not fantastic. It was real. Germany had to be met, or we| memories or yeormations the 487]. ‘Maltor: he Beat te ee acetal should have had to submit to conquest. WILSON, LOVER OF ‘PEACE, LIKE) ‘Mile for prevent continuous frouble during | LINCOLN IN HIS DAY, CHOSE WAR RATHER THAN IGNOMINY—and today, | aaa Aorsthal Ta lg aveep Cota America’s young men are backing the president up as true Americans. | hie aipesd aa aaets Pig |io the select dratt. | We bould The science of war demands select service—men fitted at exact places, not varnish the % seit | ciatwat nattion, aa 4¢ Me ihe sammabers p their feet dry. If keep going up we'll all b ng the soles of our feet to organization 1s Today, that selec *thrown together in helter-skelter fashion. being formed. To ten million Americans, it is the greatest day in their lives. For it this day that they affix their names to the pledge that they dedicate themselves, as! their country may need them, to the service of world humanity. No such day as this has ever before been known in the United States. Let us}, Hon M. P. Cashion ts all, then, dedicate ourselves to the same service, Whether we are within the age limits) “and Wm. H. Moreland in direc required by the select service law, or not. Those of us who are not subject to! {or of land records for the United registration, let us this day pledge our loyalty and faith in the men who re is on choker een All of which may be true, but Sir Roger PineCoffin ts hoepital in- pector of India. Hon. M. P. Cashion is Newfound, ister eee of thove organizations who are op posing the draft. Put them to work | on the jand or in ntration | camps. T re are five large concentra nps in England where those |disturbers and agitators are ducing necessities for the front. Anyone who rm * to defend our country !# not entitled to share in its glorious liberty PATRIOT. Belgium ty, marks the fir tep in the formation of the national a which German autocracy has overrun and fespoiled. rbia, Poland and Armenia to tell what their people tk to the oppressed nations they represent, of America’s rea today of ten million young Americans from whom will | to help free these oppressed peoples and make the world safe SERBIA ARMENIA = ——i > ¢¢ BY REV. M. 1. PUPIN BY VAHAN KEUKJIAN (Professor in Columbia Univer-| (General Secretary of the Arme. (8: sity, Recognized Serbian nian General Benevolent Union.) The rmy which i to help in Seattle Star asked Tep. nink of the importance to l entry into the war, sig. lected for service the e eie for democra POLAND | BY W. O. GORSKI ecretary of the Polish Vieting Relief Fund) Spokesman in America.) Liberation for our oppressed peo-| roe. Soe oe unk men The entrance of the United | ple is assured, now that the Amer. | eres © the first step which is to result in the creation of tates into this war marks|ican soldie going to take bit!rew Army of Liberation~eq ou the third of the greatest expres:| lace alongside the men of the al-|that will join the allied demoen. of the spirit which concelved | lied ar ciew of the world in fighting for th Bcd At last, after centuries of perse- | free the world—we of the the Declaration of Independence . n of the great-|gppressed Polish peoples oe The first wan the war of the Ameri xeracy of the world, men|out our hands in welcome gag can Revolut which was the|who themselves en life, Iberty | thanksgiving! . bead of the American peopl pursuit of happiness, ¢ The entry of America Into the Magik ona Wakdbe |< to rescue us from our| world war gives & double peal t Turkish task ore. the promise made by the allies The second was the Civil war,| With the connivance of Germany |governments that the which was our struggle for the free-|hundreds of of Ar-|ations of Europe shall be of the negro menians have been massacred dur-|from the heel of our alien This third expression of the/ing If years, Many thousands of Poles have spirit of 1776 is the struggle of this | and of thousands |come to America in years past, great republic for the freedom of | starved to death The entry of America today on the M4 Now the day of our deliverance | work of at hand Soldiers of the ands now the | is * Declaration of | bri United States, | anc and THE WORLD we welcome you with all OON AMERICANIZED! | hearts JPo “THE GOLD BUG” e BY EDGAR ALLAN POE ad (Continued From Our Last Issu for my context.” tint of the text resume you expected to find But,” I interposed, “you say 1 that the skull was not upon the @ letter between the stamp and chment w the the slg ure of drawing of “Something that kind. The de you trac fact is, I felt sistibly impressed| ° tween the and the «kull—| With a presentiment of some vast rai scooré , your| good fortune impending. | can searcely say why. Perhaps, after all, {t was rather a desire than an| actual belief;—but do you know that Jupiter's silly words, about the must b been de (God only knows how or by ) at © period subsequent tching the scarabaeus , eupon turns the whole| bt ing of solid gold, had a re-| mystery; altho the secret, at this! markable effect upon my fancy? point, I had comparatively lttle| And then the series of accidents difficulty in solving. My steps|and coinetd #—these were so C pre sure, and co ‘ord but a r < ni Do you ob- ivi j : t ant , as one m Spokane WHY MILK PRICE RISES =| Were sure, and could afford but «| very extraordinary by giving whatever other service we can. Some of us can buy Liberty Loan bonds. | fay who. didnt -kaow Bill| Editor The Star: ‘There have|#NSl® result. 1 reasoned, for ex-| serve how mere an old hare oa! y “US CJ i f i or contribute tl r a r " tere have) imple, thus: When I drew the|that these events should have oc plus in our incomes to the successful prosecution of the war. in Drew, the actor.|the heh eott of milk and t eould (Parent upon the parchment. When | year in which it has been or may | 0 LET THIS BE A REGISTRATION DAY FOR ALL AMERICANS IN THE “Who ts [ite tortay what CuMtk has helped, |! bad, completed the drawing 1) be sufficiently coo! for fire, and SERVICE OF WORLD CIVILIZATION AND HUMANITY. Doe Matthew ren heard of {to & sreat extent, to bring on this PTT oviy aul you. returned It. |—— : one “ | gg sie ; - ns . | You, t lore, did not design the | ene mare Tn most country towns today kul eo elne W present . : Va. rc ae * due how long a time does the law there are herd laws, preventing | {") Then it was not done by e Want No Race Prejudice, ©ynhia Grey's aiow tore Hear oe Toreciggdt [cats (rom gramme the human agency. Aud) nevertelen | . . | UESTION BOX ds of acres land and |" . | | Good Form |] 4 —sortragetoreciooure proceed.|temicleared land. Right in Kirk-|'t %&s done We received a letter this morning from a man who so bitterly decries our effort to raise enough money to purchase a cow for an aged German couple in the southern part of the city that he exclaims: “When do you expect to be rewarded by the kaiser with an iron cross?” War is a terrible thing. One of is that it produces in the hearts and minds of some people @ ings may started as soon as a = | mortgage becomes due. a mee ¢ jNor ALL SPENDERS Dear Miss Grey:—in answer to to say a few words. f |a letter signed “T. E.," | would like he wet result |All girls are not the epend-thrift ss Saag enkihce nal kind. There are some, and their an intolerance and race hatred that does not belong in ANY helping the young man with whom civilization. Thank God, that sort of narrowness does not bapa de are keeping company save + ra ermany. ‘ money control America in its war upon Germany All girls are not the spendthrift a certain clique that want every- | thing they @ Too often this is [the case. | A YOUNG SCHOOL TEACHER. } pat | Q—tI have served one enlistment in the National Guard, and am 24 years of age. Am | | draft? A.—You, of course, must register. |The fact that you have served an Jenlistment is not ground for ex Jemption, so far can be judged t ructions ) President Wilson has aptly stated that we are not at} war upon the German people, as such, but upon German} autocracy. But here and there we will come across one who, losing sight of this, or never having had the feal spirit of bre Americanism, would have us look upon every German as a fiend incarnate | There are literally thousands of citizens in of German birth, who are as loyal to American as native-born Americans, who are as opposed to the kaiser’s ruthless war for world conquest as the rest of the civilized) world. True Americanism teaches us to welcome these brothers in our midst, and not to look down on them iin Iu’ presented to the” Judas;| petaly workad On stot ‘se minister, governor, senator of | On the other hand, this « try, When a man is presented to a 1ed up to ¢ man, the younger is introduced to! Hi er, the emption instru the older; that is, the simple citi-| tions have not be casts he government No, The Star has no apology for treating that old Ger-| other titled persons, the name of|is seemingly anxious to obtain the v8 sl | the latter being spoken first. services of n who have had pre | vious training. STAY THERE | | Q—I! was compelled to divorce |my husband before we had been Hamstringing Democracy wp meyer ie i oeimade “a ioe 6 ‘a crwelty ord: egtedt, aii Only 10) a ee war for democracy now and live very quietly with my ILL UNDAY SA States is trying to add: parents, But this man and his WHAT BI YS AY YS . friends are saying very mean and disrespectful things about me. All man couple as human beings. Q.—When will the first drawings be made? has been set President Wilson called this The senate of the United “America excepted.” In one of his meetings at Boston What other meaning there in the bald attempt now! the people who have known me evangelist said, “I belleve under way » lift e wars financial burden from the rich, since | was a little girl are my « disease can be onted by 1 rome we'd if we can only discover who are best able to pay, and place it on the poor and their) friends, but | fear some newcom. £0F aD halle he { Vise Lilia CIT | ere in the neighborhood may be is not an ailment that posterity, for generations and centuries to come _ | Influenced against me. | am wor. God hasn't somewhere an herb The senate is now seeking to maim the house taxation|ried and discouraged by this talk, |£rowing taat will cure that aflment.” bill so that one-quarter, instead of one-half, of the war's) Shall | stay here in spite of it, or! The choice medicinal herbs which will be raised by ta nm: . " ve | 9° to another place and try to get will cure women’s ailmenta were cost will be rai fo taxation; and so that the profits and) Wore? discovered more than forty years insomes of the rich will continue to pay for their luxuries YOUNG WOMAN READER, ago, and have been doing their while the pennies of the poor will fall still shorter of buying A tay where you are Since beneficent work for half a century ir necesaities of life! ‘ are welcome at home and Lydia E. Pinkham combined them e , i [have the support of your old {a convenient form in her famous _ Poor men did not protest when the income-tax exemp- nds, you have absolutely noth: Vegetable Compound, which {ts to tion was lowered to $2.000 for married men with children to fear from lying ‘tongues. be found in the drug stores where But wealth raises an uw howl at the prospect of giving une newoome ia will gee the every ailing woman may conven f its excess : nal he { word of your old friends rather jently get it at small cost. It does up part of its exce and the senate heeds the howl. than that of your enemies. You the work! There seems to be a maggot in deme racy | will be far pier in your old rie ne ea Saleen aeS Bi ae ———_—— | surrounding n among strang h t D t ers tor theve vou would nave-no, What Doctors Use defenders against possible suspl for Eczema l 7 | clon. ‘Take up some earnest work | Women! Keep This On Dresser!} j:-hsirsonrnets rae it 0 song eguninnag a oto Db BD, ADVISES MARRIAGE | Q.—A young woman friend and 1 are planning to change from city to farm life. We propose to go to a good farm country and seek a knowledge of conditions before buying. The question of propriety is bothering our friends, who have learned something of our plane. We thought to go now, together, and get work as near each other as possible, and not to marry until ie are ready to settle down. Ie this advisable? ADVENTURERS. | A.—-Theoretically you should be! able to carry out yourp lans. But conventions would hamper you as | much one place as another. Better am Never Let Corns Ache Twice 7 * the pores: gives distres D. D. D. The Liquid Wash BART sing skin d Instantly! Few drops stop corn-soreness then corns and calluses shrivel, loosen and lift out with fingers—No pain! Thoroughness Characterizes our methods tn every transaction, and our cus: owes thanks to the The world genius in Cincinnati who discover. | °ve freezone or afterwards. It doesn’t irritate the skin or flesh For a few cents one can now get rid of every hard corn, soft corn, or | corn between the toes, as well as painful calluses on bottom of feet ed freezone, the new ether drug Smal! bottles of the magic fluid can now be had at any drug store SP ag McLane tite che ine tomers are accorded every cour. for a few cen pie ply apply Every one who tries freezone be- to marry now and seek your ad- | tesy consistent with sound lust. a few drops o' 8 Freezone upon) comes an enthusiast because it! ventures together in the more con- | nes® Judgment a tender, nolan corn or @ harden-|really doesn't hurt or pain one par-| ventional way. Frankly acknowl ed callus antly the soreness | ticle edging your relation will save the 4 disappears and shortly you will] ‘Tell your druggist you want | young woman from unpleasant 0 find the corn or callus so loose and|small bottle of genuine freezone 1 Tv eezone. | complications. The idea of thoroly Savi shriveled that you lift it off with! Bach bottle is packed in a little | learning of farming conditions be Set o5 See Sieeale the fingers. Not a bit of pain or/round wood case. Don't accept| fore buying or even leasing is q | Accounts, Subject to Check Are soreness ix felt when applying| anything else. Cordially Invited. | sensible plan, Permit ——| dissuade you from it STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS |™i£s Monrosce is ove Q—After a mortgage become: no one to Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE sr, number is not small, who think of |' subject to)! av claliste for all skin | a the moat, }to hatr-distigu |land and Juanita, where there are hundreds of acres of uncultivated | land, which would feed a grea u cows, laws have been pass recently preventing cattle from} running at large, and as a conse. quence many families have had to |send poor Bossie to the butcher as Ithey did not have enough land of | eir own to pasture their cow |raise hay for the winter, and wake a garden There is not much advantage rowadays in living in the country with such freak laws coming up continually, These herd lawe play | right into the hands of the dairy men, as the fewer family we there are the more milk they sell jand with this condition and the |high cost of feed, the price of milk bound advance steadily A STRUGGLING RANCHER, | Money * °o | makes the war go Have you bought your bond? | | LOW | EXCURSION FARES TOTHEEAST Round Trip to the Middle West and Eastern States and Canada, Commencing June 20 Northern Pacific Railway DAILY THROUGH TRAINS To Minneapolis, St. Paul, Chi cago, St. Louis.’ Best of Equip: \] ment, Fast Schedules, Perfect | Dining Car Service VISIT YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK | EN ROUTE For all detatis of fares, dates of sale, limits, trains, call at CITY TICKET orice |] Yerler and 2nd. nw, A. G. F. & P. » MeMullen, ©. P. A. Seattl y Wash New Hair Remover Works Like Magic | Poaltively Removes ttoots and All No discovery of greater benefit | nankind han | ars than the Tt is ” | been made in rec marvelour phelactine method. entirely unlike and mu cal, depilatery because it he hair enti our very ¢ harmless! follow the will delighted-—or ‘nu | ine | of be aste druggist will y without ques non-irritating Hild could safely it It r woft both, hairless, that not the least | sin of your former trouble remains. Advertisement. n jyour knees. jin bringing to ja |pear at longer or shorter intervals “At this stage of my reflections 1 endeavored to remember, and) aid remember, with entire dis tinctness, every incident which oo curred about the period in ques tion. The weather was chilly (oh, rare and happy accident!), and a fire was blazing upon the hi 1 was heated with exercise 1 near the table. You, howev drawn a chair close to the chim vey. Just as I had placed the parchment in your hand, and as you were in the act of inspecting t, Wolf, the Newfoundland, entered, ard leaped upon your shoulders V.ith your left hand you caressed him and kept him off, while your right, holding the parchment, was permitted to fall listlessly between and in close proximity to the fire, At one moment | thought the blaze had caught it, and was about to caution you, but, | before I could speak, you had with drawn it, and were engaged in its PLATES $10:2° CROWNS $5:°° SILVER 1 .00 FILLINGS $ SYNTHETIC 1 60 FILLINGS $ i. examination “When I considered all these par. GOLD 12 ticulars, } doubted not for a mo FILLINGS AND ment that heat had been the agent light, upon the perchment, the skull which I saw cesigned upon ft, You are well ‘are that chemical preparations exist, and have existed time out of mind, by means of which ft is pos sible to write upon either paper or ellum, so that the characters shall Electro Painle tlence.” (Continued in Our Next tesue) The 34th reunion of the Pioneers’ association of Washington, consish ing of men and women who hav ved in the state more tham 49 years, met Monday in the assoc 105) Pike St. S. E. Corner First and Pike ‘beration of Europe wi ng joy not only to these men 1 women who have known the our |Liessings of liberty here, but to aij les everywhere. NEXT NOVEL “A MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY” BY EOWARD EVERETT HALE ervention of the dog at the pre cise moment in which he appeared, I should never have become aware the death’s-head, and 80 never the possessor of the treagure,” But proceed—I am all tmp PIONEERS GATHER ns building at Madison perk, esday the annual luncheon will The present total mem held. ALL WORK ABSOLUTELY PAINLESS FREE EXAMINATION NO CHARGE FOR EXTRACTION WHERE OTHER WORK IS TO BE DONE ss Dentists become visible only w subject. | 4d to the action of fire. Zaffre, di-| kested in aqua regia, and diluted | with four times its weight of wa ter, is sometimes employed; a| sreon tint results. The reguius of | cobalt, dissolved in spirit of nitre. gives a red. These colors disap after the material written upon ccols, but again become apparent upon the re-application of heat “I now scrutinized the dea head with care, Its outer edges— the edges of the drawing nearest the edge of the vellum--were far more distinct than the others. It was clear, that the action of the h's caloric had been imperfect or un cual, I immediately kindled a fire, and subjected every portion of the parchment to a glowin heat. At first, the only effect was the atrengthening of the faint lines Just bursting with heat—B. T. U." of the skull; but, upon persevering best fuel in the in the experiment, there became visible, at the corner of the slip diagonally that it was intended for a kid.” Ja! ha!” said I, “to be sure 1| have no right to laugh at million and a half of money serious a matter for you are not about third link in your chain—you will not find any espectal connection n your pirates and ¢ t— | you know, have nothing to do with goats; they appertain to! the farming interest.” | “But I have just said that the was not that of a goat.” “Well, a kid then—pretty much the same thing.” | you—a | is too | mirth—bat to establish a Supreme in Furnace, Ran ONLY $5 Per Ton Pretty much, but not altoge } / e er,” said Legrand. “You may tive peel chaten heard of one Captain Kidd. 1 at once looked upon the figure of the animal as a kind of punning or hleroglyphical signature, 1 gay nature, because its position on the vellum suggested this idea, The death's-head at the cor. ner diagonally opposite, had, in the same manner, the alr of a stamp, or seal, But T was sorely put out by the absence of all else—of the body to my imagined instrument— Order dealer or phone Main from nearest 5080. your BLACK DIAMOND SOUTH PRAIRIE NEWCASTLE opposite to the spot in| which the death’s-head was deline. | ated, the figure of what I at first | eupposed to be a goat. A closer) scrutiny, however, — satisfied me| COA PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. 563 Railroad Avenue South a s. No wonder they are the market. ge, Grate and Stove Better lay in your supply now—fill op your bins with these clean, efficient units 0 concentrated heat= home preparedness,

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