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STAR—WEDNESDAY, IUNE 27, 1917. PAGE 6 psstessss32 sSsssstssssSeitsseSSstishatsssis ste see ststsiissssetetee Ses SES ISSSISIeOSSCSSUSSeRiA SEU GOSS SUSSEOMSSUSSOSSSeRESE SOULS SOUS GSSt ssi isissssssitistissiisises soc cistst ates |THE STAR'S REVIEW OF PUBLIC OPIN ION AT HOME AND ABROAD it ema OF WORLD-WIDE CON eae non sariell vans : Prepared by Abe Hurwitz, Associate Editor of The Star 3555538523552335 . a itiihiiebesipiienaet . While the press of Germany | mania; Bosnia and Herzegovina for Serbia; Trieste, Trentino and capacity now being developed under stress of war demands shall @ — —@ Of Slav blood themselves, Be e Terms of Peace professes to be amazed becau | the a atrian Adriatlo provinces for Italy, and the German colonies have be n turned to commercial uses of peace ‘ % Allies Gain Help ct nso dt Bed “n Iuade ‘more F . Preside Wilson, a man for K and “Our steel shipbuilding capacity at the end of 18 monthe w . pare aren ne past week tha | and Our Aims of War peace, in his note to Russia, | The New York Evening Post points out that {t also moans exceed 2,000,000 tone,” says the New Republic, “For several years From Bohemians | s):most at any time during the war, 5 = Ao ®@ urgee war and victory, the that Armenia and Arabia would not be forced back to Turkish after the war freight rates are likely to be bigh enough to justify |@ ° have been activel aiding the allies: -¢ PBrening Journal of Bellingham, Wash. warns the autocrats of | rule expensive construction. In the end we shall learn to build as cheap: even te the point of whole } deser fons from Teutonic armies Potsdam that some day it will dawn upon them “that a man of | Hut, while the Atlanta Constitution declares that “the man ly we any other nation. When the German merchant marine at last |10 the Russians and Serbians. While these devertions have gained | Peace, compelled in selfdefense to make war, is acting much mo! | who would not fight for such principles” as President Wilson enun fasues from ita harbors, it will ecounter the competition of an | more publicity recently, we are informed by the Chicago Svornost tently than men of war who speak as tho peace has been | clates in his note to Russia, “is not worthy to be known as an Amer American merchant marine, great and rapidly growing, and vigor. | that a regiment composed entirely of ¢ # from the Middle Wegt fonsistently tha: mn ho sp p | & y " fl d in the Canadt before the United 8 their sole object.” foan citizen,” the pubileation of the woman's peace party of New ously supported by the government that has called it Into being was formed in the Canadian army before the United States entereg President Wilson's peace terme, in reply to Rui announce York city, Pour Lights, curtly askw, in {te is@ue of June 16, "By oeeee the Pid Aipinie bile oa hs Gish ‘Ment of a policy of “no annexations, no indemnitios,” and calling for the way, what ARE the peace terms of the United States?" COMPARING HOHENZOLLERN SOPHIA, of Greece, with her ‘ ae i aye od Ros nem a " wf cpt eh phy ne aed have alg” position of the allies, is “the War message of a peace presi ot. ¢ oe Danish-bred husband, the female of the species is more deadly than po leh “7 ro aera ‘ asa hed: Soon vs 4 te . be pe elgg bot Ge agin pc a THE PROBLEM of turning the panhandler into the plowhand- baer «tiie nipialle yo the German armies.” They have also smaller detachments in the | tm accons with a ave aims of “restitution and reparation i ler is not the least of the social enigmas.—Philadelphia Public ial ~ The appointment of Lord arate “ of the othes allies am ba ec “Im the eyes of the United States,” declared Premier Ribot to Ledger. ee * The Appointment “of | Northcliffe, famous British ed- | 4) Cy GBPen ae ter ‘by “the Poised eg a ee the Frenc! bred e restity Alsace-Lorraing will be { fto the head of the new allah Seg - se je Mla ~ ery hen neither ieaaast wr ecaibution Yeseraiibn tor damages will not | ao A rather novel presentation __Lord Northcliffe 4 Beltish’ mivison to America, ia |f&bUng Ix over, the Bohemians contributing their loyal share, “the De indemnity of war, but a simple act of Justice. | Not This War ot bet wae aimee ta Suma te the = ASE: subjected to un interesting an- |Y0ICe of America will be heard in favor of liberty for Bohemia” 10 6 @ © | to Abolish Kin July Metropolitan, in which the alysis by the New Republic, with the following results rl MURDERS AND robberies are sald to be frequent in Petro. |g 0 OU e editor says, “We are not in this ‘Since many Amerteans are wondering upon what theory the tre! bred ed ol apes abe RUE STE SEN 10: SOE But there is no need to conclude from that fact that Russla is war to abolish emperors or British government selected Lord Northcliffe as chief of its war . 1S e868 kings, however laudable an object that may be.” “If we were,” he continues, “we should be obliged to perform to blow up. Murders and robberies are not infrequent in | staff in this country, it 1s worth while to attempt an axplanation le Dallas News. | | | The reason cannot be that, like Mr, Balfour, he would be particular —— The world war has also atirre@ oe a ae & major surgical operation on the constitution of Japan, where au iy table to American public opinion ‘and the American gov ? Republics | far | Gis up keen Ses of a republie fer S iadaesildel nen de o tocracy still exists to much the same extent as tn Germany, A notes a : . tratic reland an © government of T oul Rus Note President Wilson makes it clear | gttim to begin with, to say nothing of Great Britain, Let us not be Deolaitbae aha fameuer | Gstocaia’ ees Whale ee ak we ad dependent state or under some pro jo! | 4 iM a | . pereiliou bout kings as long as have our Carnegies and “- v pctorato, ritain erms in Kuss to the Resehins cad Che WOM | TO) Ceeeransliore, Whee chbTe of autceratin power 16 IntAttly He probably received his appointinent, not because he was The Irish World, published at New York, declares “Ireland will 7 e that the principle thus involy | Saline than pr aie db cat canstivetinnad coveralls particularly fitted to represent Great Britain in this country, but | not have vivisection,” and rejects Lloyd George's proposal of home rule ed must not clash with the following conditions ® . m Ger mate hiees. in this Wee to eet. ub vendilite Wher because, for an obvious reason, it was convenient to transform | for jreland exclusive of Ulster. So bitter is this Journal against Brit. — “No people must be forced under sovereignty under whieh tt or is ou rain h him into a public official, Until bis appointment, he was the most ish rule that it also tak President Wilson sharply to tas ! ever we think that a people is being governed by a stronger power | “page Thra } harply ask, in an 1 not wish to live. i oat We Mould have thought of going to warthres | powerful private individual in the United Kingdom. Thru his pa Jarticle by Robert Ellis Thompson, for “his changed attitude” on the a “No territory must change hands except for the purpose of se | nod ’ and or Bohemia, or to give back her lost pera, he exercised an enormous influence British opinion. | war which made the United States an ally of Great Britam 4 r those who inhabit it a fair chance of life and liberty | f —e = . He made and unmade ministers and cabi | “If the reasons now given for our participation as allies in the | “No indemnities must be insisted on except those that const! boa in thia wer, the Metropolitan editor belleves, “to pus We well kyow how desirable it is at times to appoint werful | war are correct,” says this article, “then we ought to have begun ment for manifest wrongs cool nee i ie Geman sak 06 ‘detnaad reteibution that she will under individuals to foreign missions in order to k them loyal support fe wie be of Belgium in 1914. Then, instead of reelecting | po’ made except such is ~ n . b bane by +. ern 0) 16 goVerume t 4 7 “beca e he € i] ar,’ 7 . readjustments of power must ; e . “y “ped stand that rathiees aggression sgainet peaceful neighbors does not ra of t vernment at home 2 pik # ites r ilson ‘because he kept us out of war,’ we should have defeated to secure the future peace of the world and the future welfare Might this be also an explanation of (he appointment o' er |him as a traitor to humanity ind happiness of its people.” pay i eens teens “te Lippman, one of the editors of the New Republic, as confidential Under a full-page headline, “A Historic Day for Zion's Hopes,” ary to Secretary of War Bake Thus the president lines up firmly against a peace based on “Indemnity to Belgium, the restoration oo that existed before the war, and assuring Russia that France, the freeing of Poland and Bohemia, are all The New Republic, readers | the New York Jewish Morning Journal prints a specif! dispatch from . has d that it ts con Washington to the effect that it has become known in diplomatic ood in them- of the Outlook will espectally reme: @ States is fighting “for the liberation of peoples every ee eo they mean the celvable that the United States, placed in the same situation as circles that the plan to establish a Jewish state in Palestine has been — from the aggressions of autocratic foree,” he also issues the weakening of Germany a aa | many, would have acted similarly to the kaiser, The Outlook | officially agreed upon at a conference between the allies, held im that “the day has come to conquer or submit.” ‘i i | pounced upon the New Republic for that, but the latter Journal re Rome recently oeeee THE SENTIMENT, “Make the world pds for peers Ad 's | fnained steadfast in counseling the government to consider well And the London New Europe points out that because French po HAITI HAS covered reiations with Berlin. Strike up the “Hymn especially popular in Washington, where it le Lage st aaa the claims of conscientious objeétors Utieal, commercial and military interests in Palestine are smaf, “no | .-—Chicago Tribun: referring to the Southern democracy —Chicago ribune. | cee 8 ie [better guaranty” for all concerned could be had “than a Zionist Mp LE ae e kis aneeas benietic-to Aina] THE STATE will be bone dry July 1. What is so jestine under the British flag.” —_— To the New York Evening “rege = aE . | pare as a day in June? Answer: A wet day in July—Spokane = Post, President Wiison’s note to *U-Boats to Give Us from the German submarine sgokeeman Ravion, a = . campaign in foteseen by an | Pe ae | . Poland, Bohemia | rico ae ice thie | Merchant Marine | ingenious editorial writer of the | | the allies, which | een The fight for conscription of New Republic, who has assem. |® 7 " 2 ee ; : —_ lows: | surplus incomes and excess profits, “Alsace-Lorraine for France; an eapuaas Poland, incinding bled figures to show that the United may reasonably expect | Reed Aids Fight to eal as On aoemsenieat ia sue r Polish provinces in Germany and Austria; Transylvania for Ru | to occupy second place as an ocean carrier when the shipbuilding — Conacript Wealth is caining in importance as the nen. ——_-—_ — Sa fs ao SSS LL fl ‘e - —@ ate finance committee draws nearer | ar pounda, I think they say—but what iy ire ginal ort. The Seattle Star has supplemented its editorial | - is that ton't you! 2emands with printed petitions to congressmen and senators, which d o Star |: Published Dally) | “It is a large sum it has urge saders to forward to the national capital. The New e =| | think there is a mistake? {York Evening Mail, both editorially and in a sp 1 article by John ie 5 gendctame mater “No mi at all Reed, shows that if American corporations earning large profits be nw Mr. Rivers rose now and put bi8| cause of the i Ur toe the sate os cag. Mee ‘¢ months, F100; 86¢ per month ap to ¢ caure © he war Were to be taxe at he FEinglis rate they would . . ee ae ii ‘py sanrian, city. 2h © mouth. ata OL GLEDDASAOOL. TOF ElMMDEE ho utife ween naked fcr it Third and Madison war tax bill.” Reed is authority for the stater ¢loak on “Stop one minute!” I erted. nt that thi * are j a thousand commodities on which the owners make per cent r) F A NE EYRE NEXT NOVEL on Briggs wrote to you about Me: OF there should be no one with any “veated Interest in it is suf A how he knew you, or could fancy | fiejent, in his opinion, for the excess profit tax of England, whic “Robinson Crusoe” {;that you, living in such an outof | Koen as high as 4 per cent ‘ peea hl mes BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE se " —— ms aid in my discovery.” of Gateshead, the other, Jo pi struggles I had, and arguments | pl Bar Eeq., merchant, tate of Madeira. used, to get matters regarding the THEATRE The| “No. tonight!—tonight!” and as| Mr. Briggs, being Mr. Eyre's solicl- legucy settled as [ wished. But at From Our Last teeue), For some minutes no one spoke. left Marsh End for Morton, |) ted he turned from the door, I placed |tor, wrote to us last August to in- last it was arranged. Diana and is was well indeed, for in| Diana then turned to me. one Mag Berry se in a week |myselt between it and him, He /form us of our uncle's death, and Mary gave up thelr positions, and more Diana and Mary, “Jane, you will wonder at us x g Pane: ‘and Hannah repai looked rather embarrassed! to say that he had left his property spring saw us a happy family set turh to their positions, St. and our mysteries,” she said, “and| iy. parsonage; and so the old| “I would rather Diana or Mary |to his brother the clergyman's or. tled at Marsh End. | the parsonage at Morton, think us hard-hearted beings not |‘? The par ; informed you.” phan daughter, overlooking us, in| (Continued in Our Next Issue) with and Marsh End to be more moved at the death of Of course these objections consequence of a quarrel, never for. o 9 ° . oe ID, TK.’s .°.}) grange was abandoned. closed. 80 near a relation as an uncle; but TER | wrought my eagerness to a climax; |given, between him and my father the cause of much sor- we have never seen him or known ' Pe gag P= \eratified tt must be, and that with-| He wrote again a few weeks since, part of my new friends. him. He was my mother’s brother.| yy pome—then—when I at last Ot delay, and I told him so. to intimate that the hejress was bb! 4 haps, aware lost, and asking if we knew any- c grieved, for she It was by his advice that my father | .4°. home—ia a cottage You are not, per! Mow that their father was risked most of his property in the | a1, morning, the village school that I am your geen get Se rth Leones of her A same hago St. John would carry | speculation that rulmed him. Mj oocceg Thad twenty scholars, But | Ws christened St, Jonn Eyre written on 8 atlp of paper bas COLYUM tual reerimination passed between | (Po ue the number can read: | ¢rs” 4 nled_me to find . | them. My uncle afterwards reallzed | none write or cipher. Several knit,| “No, indeed 7 remember now |know the rest | || | cents for any one of 2,100 seats at the day I left for my new post,/a fortune of twenty thousand | land a few sew a little seeing the letter E. gain he was going, but I set my | daily weekday matinees, beginning g at 2 and 4 p. m. bronght a letter to the tea pounds. He was never married, A 8 1, settled, con-/ Your initials written in books you | t the door. and had no near kindred but OUT. | ee ee een eee ed in| have lent me, but what?— ne speak,” I anid, “Your F Uncle John is dead,” said selves, and one other person, Not) yonjer bare, humble school room| ! ho fee Aas) Sr | Mother was my father’s sister |more closely related than we. MYlinig morning and afternoon? No;,. ! knew by Instinc a | oe | 2" repeated Diana. |father always cherished the dear ei desolate to a degree, But 1| ter stood, before St. John had # You three, then, are my cous-| Me hears dead soins that he would atone for his error.| continued the labors of the village |@nother word, but I cangot expect in aoe en os crac a L- * fiveted = searching gaze on by leaving his possessions to U8: | i405) ax actively and faithfully as|the reader to have ~ me in “We are cousins, yes.” iene ahente | ther's face. “And what |that letter informs us that bo has| Pong” tt was truly hard work at |tultive perception, so I must repeat) “Cn, | am giad!—I am glad!” 1| Thole arisly fate hetere hie staring eres: ; she demanded, in a low bequeathed every penny to th®|yi yor eventually | became a| bis explanation exclaim “Write to Diana and| qe dose not feel a force malignant rise | 8 \other relation. He had a right, Of | ravorite in the neighborhood. And “My mother’s name was Eyre; | Mary tomorrow,” I said, “and tell —The living curses of the murdered aoe Die?” he replied. | course, to do as he pleased; a2d| ynonever I went out I heard on|*he had two brothers, one a clergy them to come home directly; Diana deed! i Read.” lyet Mary and I would have es- Jall sides cordial salutations, and | ™&® who married Miss Jane Reed said they would both consider!4 Mt the keleer’s the letter Into her lap. | teemed ourselves rich with a thou | oa. Si itomed with friendly smiles themselves rich with « thousand arin erie stress, of th the nigh over it, and handed bad bone pounds each; cons 16 Se Meantime St. John Rivers came t T h { pou so with ee thousand they | pne‘Gea he has blaephemed, eG we nts for any one of 2,100 seats ok pace or ay gyre riba y ften to the school, and as the will do very well.” | trowned ce ‘ ble, for the good it would have | ° cirdeiad ue deinen ‘the ‘Jus @ Touch 0 | “Perhaps if you explained your.| Wh Prussian bays for Prossian deeds tonight and eve night bled him to do.” nce ge pie self a littl |: wendt wee! ry All three looked at each jenabled him to do habit of stopping at my cottage of | -Mi t, PRESTO! elf a little more fully, I should |, onder Mf he finds true rest in aleep and all three smiled—e! This explanation given, the mb-| 10 evening to bring me books or Ce- i] comprehend better.” | White 9 children moan and women f, pensive smile enough. * fect was dropped. The next day 1 papers. His visits meant much to BS E plain! You cannot fall to see} Soca hts Sed the empire waned too | me, both for my enjoyment of his||Ah! How Cool, Easy and Com.| that twenty thousand pounds, the | great! brilliant mind, and the news he, fortable Your Feet Will Feel! sum in question, divided equally Me « * | always brought of one or the other | Har pound ga | between the nephew and three|™* “Wend'ta Tecg.c ns Srenenet the WEDNESDAY of his sisters, whom I had learned] Cor sutterer® eather round: get | nieces of our uncle, will give five| Me pinged mankind in agony pro- right up close and listen, here's as cone. SES wie for you, + BSF" thousand to each? What T want 4 On auch an avening just before) 1° Fes], kenuine “Corn-Killer’ felts, that you should write to your|" The haters sicep. i sconat™ ot | All new program Christmas he camo in, and after|{iri, Me mie dinovtry nate trom Matere and tell them of the for. | seating himself before the fire, an-|@ Japanese product. is sald to sure- (tune that has accrued to them.” | New York police are to have a nounced that he would recount 0 | ant gricelz end fil foot misery, “To you, you mean.” St. John|shakeup as a result of their tale. | that ling, soothing Ice-Mint and | insisted | bungling of the Cruger ca Pos “Twenty years ago,” he began,| Feat foot Joy ia yours, No pain. not) I need not narrate in detall the sibly you don't know what a police : a poor curate—never mind his! piying it or afterwards and it does | ——— = thakeup It is the transfer of T f l M sake cial to love Wine rich | Bot Sven irritate the eurrc HF) one set of honeheads to the posts . uneru iners kin eld by another set of boneheads. man’s daughter; she married him,| ""{P, stint just makes a pair of —THE— | o end red wo ny burnin, ‘eet the posts of the fi ay he , against the advice of all her friends | tired, swoll hing, by af BANK OF CALIFORNIA | ing taken by the pri By ee ‘au THE TWO JEWELS x NATIONAL ASSOCIATION eeryed |who consequently disowned her.| lew with Which reminds us—has anybody | Before two years passed the rash 1 ru | OF SAN FRANCISCO |! hoard about Charlie Tennante Se —Novel Comedy | pair were both dead. They left a/ an apprect | daughter. Charity carried the} friendless thing to the house of Its 1k ‘onpecially — attle defec es e@ department catch. tich, maternal relations; it was} > heel shoes {ng any murderers lately? feared by an auntin-law, called (1) s2%,inen «who are obliged to stand | A NATIONAL BANK : Seta come to names now) Mrs. Reed of| | Try it. Just ask in any drug store | Member of Federal Reserve Rank Neither have we Gateshead—you start—did you hear | for a eamall, Jer fie ‘Mint and DERE —— /j ee : . K . eS ° 5 & noise? Mra, Reed kept the or-| comfort really in. There is nothing ng jarpies nother thought! A prisoner es —I Th Ww G shen ton years: whether kh wale Sas $16,800,000.00 caped from the Seattle police the n e ise Guy | | cther night by fooling them. That th To Make Hai erste ia ideal way to escape from a and Curly in One Right || eAthena SAN | alec Soe ieee,” ff LEWIS & BROH B.C, WAGNER = Ss SAE eanaaes Sonnac a nace eens OTT aia: Sieey payne bin. nas —In Songs and Fun BEN BURKE —Rube Musical Act AND THE happy or not with her, I cannot fay, never having been told; but lat the end of that time she trans-| ferred it to Lowood School. The| orphan’s career there was very hon-| orable; from a pupil, she became| | which Is of ¢ Tre r, Rivers!” 1 fnterrupted leas, has th cullar property of “T can guess your feelings,” he| ating in pretty waves, ‘creagen and said, “but restrain them for aldid“dressing, keoping the halt ae. while, Of Mr, Rochester's char-|lehttully soft and glossy acter I know nothing, but the one able At Bes Bike atte aa fact that he professed to offer hon ry cur for weeks. Tt orable marriage to this young girl, and that at the very altar she dis covered he had a wife yet alive, | tho a lunatic. The governess left Thornfield Hall in the night; eve research after her course has t a teacher—she left it to be gover-|ine with a clea brush 4 Hoover. But most of us will con ees to the ward of a certain Mr.|ectusily make s hair bea tinue to depend on the dishwasher. a fully curly ove i liquid, | = ~ saiaiheshahesianihebeninelend: “9 Se | Ro ester. erfectly harm floor paints do Not compare with Tronite. Painted with ‘Tronite you have a hard surface that WEARS “LIKE IRON. The colors of lronite, too, are | particularly attractive. Under stress of the hardest usage the DURABILITY of Ironite is In time of need Every woman should know the comfort, and experi- ence the relief of a reliable remédy that can be de- pended upon to right conditions which cause head- ache, dizziness, languor, nausea and constipation. At such times, nothing is so safe, so sure and speedy as Krenny, UR KIDNEYS Nen feet and ha n aa) ios 9: cS vain, Yet that she should be found| fo wwol feet and handy remarkable. te hesctie & mabiee of uerious ur painn torture you Yau gency; advertisements have been ¢ tn eee k. pain in the lower ! LAVOLOID | put in all the papers; I myself have | | vn. dirticully, when urinating ) INSIST ON received a letter from one Mr, Trouble ie with your kidneys. | Url _ Briggs, a solicitor, communicating | ®!4 poisoning, In one form or an “IRONITE” WHEN and | Plitetataie’t hors Son yoparnd | aay Par ea ! ‘ wrote to me of a Jane huis : e he continued, “the adver LD MEDAL Haarlem f mmediately, They are } YOU ASK FOR OF tisementa demanded a Jane Kyre 4 'T knew a Jane Elliott You own r Mentanies, sotabining: as During the past sixty years, millions of women have found them ‘“ 9 "1 1 iT. the name and renounce the allas?"|t healing off and most helpful in toning and strengthening the system, and for regu- IRONITE ED for sanitation "“Yeu--yes—bit where te Mr,| KMOwn fo physicians lating the stomach, liver and bowels. These famous pills are entirely Were not for the coat avery j MeL Hid te ah In thetr ! bie and contain no harmful or habit-forming Use them marble. But with Larclotd ARR Re gladly 0 ARE R ay ; with entire confidence for, they cause no unpleasant after ‘effects, and Manufactured by you Raye equal sanitar on tse grass : Renn — becatise paid junele, Mr. Eyre of Madeira, is wash It down and cleanse dead; that he has left you all his a yi ugh of " { 1 4 . Yorie, dust and ‘other “as |Property, and that you are now] {¥, But when you ‘ ny cleaniiness rich—merely that—nothing more.”| tfaariem Ol) ineC Here was a new card turned up! | the the pure, origina Be sure the will not fail you Directions of Special Value to Women are with Every Box. Sold by druggists throughout the world. In boxes, 10c., 25¢. e name GOLD “How much am I worth?” Ol RO ‘Oh, @ trifle!’ Twenty thousand! guaranteed by The Owl Drug Co. A thrilling 5-part film feature