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7 Wm. Denman and | Goethals in Clash | HE SEATTLE STAR | iget Seven iy oF scrires NW ATH WEST eT LBAGUE Felearaph News Service of the United Prees Asceciation Batered ai Seattle, Wash. Postoftice as Recond-c * 7° “Ave, Near Union # | or Nkwerarens mon) | mos $1.00; year hee a'month. ick Gets a Vote He is an ugly little man with a nose that is slightly up-} and pouchy eyes. He is marked neither by physical} gility nor mental prowess. Until aid he had lived ly all his days He was bred up in the belief that he was superior to any ther human being and that his blood was the bluest of the| Annes | years STAR—SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1917. eo’ -E. D. K's ore COLYUM _ RPMV IC Herton raley afar and seee me not? Whe Ny Hitt grew hot? tek leas 1m wre: y eheekt y ekip, tote grip that f come thre The Walter ite o tp? Tt is reported that the Germans The world was his oyster and it was there solely for Jare using cabbage and strawberry ie delich and other kinds of weeds as a sub : aga. - stitute for tabacco, Too bad, too The suffering of the poor, the aspirations of the noble bad, Why don't they try grape dreams of the generous, all found his heart closed and leaves or corn «ilk? ous and his soul blind. e re Then suddenly he was taught that he was human and] yy IN UTAH Pires ? LIAM fe ermon's “ and fallible like the rest of us. He was tossed from his DENMAN . ak x renoa's wite, coming of power. He was stripped of his glittering baubles. This is William Denman, of the BAS COQ MOreing, & As a gracious boon it has just been announced to him | United States shipping board, who} it he will be allowed to vote along with 180,000,000 others, |has clashed with Mal. Gis. Gow) He who once denied all voice to the people has OW | gram. Denman wants to build 11,000 wooden ships as fast aa pos Nicholas | sible, to defeat the German subma rine campaign of elimination, Goe |thals has Diocked the program and |played with the ateel Interests Denman is a San Franctaco lawyer} and expert on maritime affairs. | Editor’s Mail GERMANS AND ENGLISH the people been granted one tiny voice It is an ironic ending to the fool's vision noff, once autocrat of all the Russias. Politics Be Hanged According to Washingtén Correspondent Gilson Gard , congress has decided that Woodrow Wilson is candidate a third term as president. Of course, to spring national politics or to permit na politics to have any bearing on action at Washington, a or The Sta wa nue t this time, would be little short of sedition and downright coc cag aden tt ak Dig ein , but; nevertheless, a condition is approaching such |tetter, which appeared in Satur s has, ‘on several occasions, since W ashington’s time, set the |day’s paper; also the editorial jabout the Germans, and I belleve to boiling, politically, regardless of all important non matters on hand. This condition will be aggravated, in the case of Wilson. chief objection to a third term is danger of autocracy dent Wilson not only has all the power of official but practically absolute control of our martial, fi business and domestic interests. In fact, he's al more kinds of an autocrat than was Grant, Jefferson, Monroe, or any other two-termer. | But, just now, there's more sense and fun in discussing tatoes and beans than the campaign of 1920, A bas tics ! sleasing British Navy In the you are right 7 yerm Jed up to thelr present barbarism | Personally, I believe {t would t re than two generations of suc turn the English aking soldiers into such brutes. education can do lot, al ul | ea a for instance e ue Americans of years we bh dislike and distrust England and e English. We are told that in England there are the greatest ex tremes between wealth and dire poverty, and Mngland ts given over to the Interests of the aristocrats Maybe so. og But England's ving of control of exports to the president there} making a better showing unity of the highest importance. To a great extent|war than our own rich m @ Mecessity of the British blockade can be removed, since | are bolting up the senate been United States exports that have slipped thru new-|O" selfish onds Habe a oer | countries, to the advantage of Germany. share in the war and to give moat) © President Wilson can see to it that neutrals get no more of our praise to France—even you. enough for their own immediate needs. Mr. Editor. You say we are not to/ Ce Relief of a large part of the British navy from confine-|"a¥* any race prefudice—good on blockade duty may mean some special enterprises Then let's forget our old-time preju-| British navy. Most of the time we've hardly realized aristocrats in are this ¢ who their we dice against the “blooming English man,” hty British davy was afloat. We may soon sec highly dramatic. | EDITORIALETTES | of “the kaiser,” betng careful, course, not to hurt the Germans. ARE THE RICH SLACKERS? Editor The Star Tam an old concrete ne reputable Pacific coast hog will fee! that he’s traveling flag and nation. tions the nation has called for. The h nding money into. thing better than firecrackers to put the spe io y rich man must do hia bit. A rich this city that has not yet beer scratched—enough to make up the entire $300,000 for the Ret Cross without ask the poor man to go without necessities in order to j|make up the fund P. C. \ THE STARVING Germans are beginning to that sink. Ing an allied food ship isn’t bringing home the bacon. CE-MINT ENDS FOOT MISERY |) 's Quick Relief for Sore, Tired, Aching, Swollen, Burn- ing Feet, Painful Corns and Callouses. w JUDGE SMITH ROASTED Editor The Star: I can not help |but comment on the nentence Judge |Everett Smith gave Edward Owen real foot-comfort for you|the magic touch of Ice-Mint, They || Northern bank watonne Herbert Freee Pole Whsleonte Artichokes Asparagus Beane Corn Muske—-Iee lb. Cacumbers— explant e#tand shoulder to shoulder a} with him, and lick the stuffing out|Werseredieh—Local’ per i! of Lettuce—Per crate | cat MRS. JOHN J. CHISHOLM, | Local, head. per don. Fall City, Wash, | Okre Per box Unions Pe SUCH HELP as we can give each other In this world ls a man of 60, with no education to|Periey— to each other; and the man who perceives a superiority sneak of. One of boys has reg o~ expeoes ‘a capacity in a subordinate, and neither confesses nor as- istered and claimed no exemption.| Peppers ter 1a — it, is mot merely the withhoider of kindness, but the When h d there were those Sra of injury-—Ruskin. who cared more for thelr money than their country, he bought a ¢ Liberty bond—not for cash, but on OVER IN Imperial valley, the Southern Pacific has In- the short time he may have left bathtubs for hogs that are being shipped East. before be Jays down his life for the } tuxe without toothbrush*and manicuring set. We have donated to the Red Cross and intend to continue w RUSSIA AND Greece have lost their kings and Alfonso of we can. We are now called on to ‘Spain seems willing to quit. We hear Charles Edward Rus. donate a day's wages, or a watch. | sell, over in Russia, repeating his refrain: “No more kings, That, {t seems to me, ts going) Applee— ‘ne more wars.” pretty far, when there are many| #7" men In Seattle who have not known! THERE SHOULD be no trouble, this year, in finding some- real sacrifice yet in ANY contribu-| ning fe t man’s automobile is worth as much | Geoseberries—rer ib. KING ALFONSO, beware! You're too popular and demo @ our Ingersoll watch—and no | "me? cratic for the ordinary run of kings and euch. more. There is enough wealth in Brotlers: the physician who was attend ing her husband “In he very ult’ she asked anxiously “Ho 1s," replied the phyat clan, “I fear that the end ts not far off.” “Do you think,” she asked hesitatingly, “do you think It proper that I should be at his during his last mo But T advise you to hurr madam, The best places are already being taken.” ——@® eee (Minn) Courter ee FATHERHOOD When Victor Herbert's last child} ns have been educat-/*48 born to him, a friend congrat ated id I suppose the famots musician and your life just now 1s one grand, sweet song?” Well, not that exactly,” answer ) Be r ert. “It's more like an op full of grand marches, with calls for the author every Ladies’ Home Journal ht Pe ERE ICES Today’s Market Report a | Dentore fer Vegetabiee and Fruit VRORTANLES Per dos. . Yer io Green Florida. per erat Net Florida, per tb. new, per Ib hothouse . fuse 10-1». box atermelow Ver ib. “Prices Paid Producers for Ra Toultry, Veal aad Fork wi7. five to six years in Walla Walla.| ,, & Touch Stops Soreness. Presto! The Feet Feel Cool, ||| Evidently, Judge Smith was not Turkeye—I ; “cent, aah |on as friendly terms Mr. Owen| VealPancy. th to 136-pound ms Easy and Comfortable. Try it as he was with Mr. Collior, of O14. live. 8 ood-bye to your old will feel #o cool and comfortable ; ~ ° iy Blanters and) that you will sigh with relief. It's ap po dl t - : | Selling, Prices to Retailer tor | y grand. It’s glor h ne sentence ‘ou aon ‘oui —to end foot trouble: Sr long houre of standing | te at bi x0! n - ° oe Of Ice-Mint—a creamy, terrors for the friends of Ic Nogk Ni lay pay Wi tly few gb int, snow-white preparation, Resolve to end your foot | Well, here is one family of voters Native Washington creamery, onbe. 38 Medicinal ingredienta are to Do not neglect those poor, || which will not vote for Judge Smith| Nattve Washington creamery, briek .39 eA from Japan, where the| tired, burning, corn-pestered fost MRS. A Fresh California, cube H |again. le have the finest, healthiest any longer, for here is real “foot- Hitthe tect in the world. joy” for you at last. | Fremont Ave., Fremont, Wash, |eee—Select ranch «++. tub a te lee-Mint a any) Se matter Te you eve tried | be whee ra ing corn or callous r how many times you heen Domestic wheel stantiy the Saorenens digapp laappointed, ‘Ice Sic hae been || SUGGESTS MORATORIUM Limvarger” i lightful, cooling, soothing | you Just the relief and satinfactio F The Sts of our| Oreeon triptets are fmparted to the sxin.. {n| that you have been longing for. | Editor The Star: Many of our! ‘Wisconsin triple Boshort time the corn or cailoug| Try jt! Ask at any drug store people would buy Liberty Bonds if ‘ m and may be lifted out! day for a small jar of Ice-M |pressing obligations did not de ily with the fingers. conta little and acts so quickl Rand: th , an |@— . BP aY sour poor, tired, aching | gently, it seems like mesic Tourn |jmand the c h. As ® young man, Country Hay and Grain len, burning feet ever feell say so yourself ct to draft, I suggest that the! | (Prices paid wholesaler) mment at once declare a|@——— ——— horatéeit Otherwis HL Beratch Food ii é moratorium. Otherwise it is evi. Serateh Foe Gent that thousands will lose their 4ncorain Chop property on account of war condi-| Oats tions, Mortgages will be foreclosed, |contracts will be canceled and ‘housands will not be in position to (defend themselves w NEW PANTAGES L. WALLER, taxes! MARTY BROOKS Presents Wisconsin twi Kolled Oats Bran MATS., 2:30 NIGHTS, 7 AND 9 Palmer Junction, Wash, | Herm Bean Meal Alfalfa eal Solomon maintained 1,400 charl. | Beet Serap= BEGINNING MONDAY AFTERNOON ote Lordy! Rew herd Haan Manet | Basie Beet h California, brick Young America or Ground ley. ked Corn “In the Heart of Seattle's Wholesale and Shipping District” “Miss Hamlet” An uproarious musical travesty, with Pauline Barri and a company of biiwiec including a beauty chorus. — MISS LEILA SHAW & CO. —IN— “A TRUTHFUL LIAR” Other Big Features—10c and 20c Commercial Savings Trusts GUARDIAN Trust & Savings BANK Cor. First Avo, at Columbia 8t. Cha ever: tomere are accorded every oui tesy consistent with sound \ual- ness Judgment. Accounts Subject to Check Are Thoroughness terizes our transaction, methods tn and our cus- Cordially Invited. Peoples Savings Bank ae PAGE 4— { ME “AT “JANE EYRE” (200 |" i “a 7 ” = ore OL ) Robinson Crusoe Ment in used every day 5 » BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE By Daniel DeFoe }}1n most house holda There are 5 a other foods that IRAP LALLA ed kive an munch (Continued From Our Last teowe) | gesture, but not seeing where I) the ine. for reconcilement to my » °o ‘ a : oe The ‘couse of Ferndean| stood, he did not touch me, “Who! Maker, | bagan sometimes to pra ‘or len ey. va i. butidin sg pela Fads ry an. { fs it?) What is it? Who speaks?" | vory brief prayers the , but These include tquity, moderate «ize and deep| “Pilot knows me, and John and| very sincere cheese, beans, buried In a wood, | had heard of| Mary know I am here, I came only “Home days since, nay, T can s and nuts, it before Ir. Rochester often | this evening,” | answered number them—four; it was last people spoke of it and sometines went Great Ge what delusion has| Monday night, @ singular mood feel they must there come over m What sweet mad | came over m Late that n have meat every eo this he 1 came, Just ere| ness bax sxelzed me? perhaps it might be between eleven | day. It is therefore important to dark, on an oning marked t He grop I arrested bis wan-|and twelve o'clock--I was in my know how to get the most out of penetrating n dering snd prisoned it in|own room, and sitting by the win-| meat at the least cost I drew near and knocked; John's | both mine dow, which was open, 1 longed for The toughest ¢uts are the cheap |wife opened for me. “Mary,” I| “Her very fingers!” he eried;|thee, Jane! Ob, I longed for thee ost put they are just as nutritious sald, “how are you” “her small, slight fingers! If so,\both with body and woul! I asked! an the expensive cuts. By long, To her hurried “Is {t really you,| there must be more of her.” of God, at once in anguish and bu) wigw cooking they can be made tie, come at thin Inte hour to this) The muscular hand broke from|Mlity, If I had irs ong | very tender and palatable. lonely place 1 annwered by tak-|my custody; my arm was selzed,|COUKN desolate, all ryt In order to keep in the juice Jing her hand; and then I followed | my ghoulder—neck-—waist—-1 was |mented. That T Mideast i and preserve the flavor, heat the her Into the kitchen, where Jobn| ontwined and gathered to him ured, I acknowledged that 1 neat on all sides, press it down |now nat by a fire “Ie it Jane? What is it? This| (ot scarcely endure more, || quickly on a hot pan, thes cook i | 1 expfained to them, in a few a pleaded; and the alpha and omega {C0 y OD Ot iow fire. | in her shape—this in her size } y heart's wishes broke invol y words, that I had heerd all which of my hear ini Iways uso the Bae had happened since I left Thorn “And this te her voice,” I added. | untarily from my lips in the words) One can alwa: If nothing Bet field, and that [ was come to see|"She is all bere; her heart, too. Jane! Jane! Jane!'” fat and trimmings nothing \ ' ee . ter can be done with them, the Mr. Rochester, Just at this mo-|God bi you, sir! Iam glad to Did you speak those words on tne winnas ment the parlor-bell rang be no near to you again,” jsloud?” pene ity ge Fear ces 4 the She p ded to fill a glans| “My living darling! But I can-| “I did, Jane, If any listener bad used in te yon ® .- with w nd place it on a tray,| Dot be so blest, after all my mis-|heard me, he would have thought wed boking. together with candles. ery. It is dream; such dreams as|me mad, I pronounced them with Is that what he rang for?” 1/1 have had at night when I have | such frantic energy Mr. Rochester continued blind asked. clasped her once more to my heart, “And it was last Monday night, the first two years of our union; You; he always bas his candles |es I do now; and kissed her, as|somewhere near midnight?” perhaps it was that circumstance brought in at dark, tho he ia thus. It {# you—ts it, Jane? You| “Yer, but the time is of no con- that drew us so very near—that blind are come back to me, then?” sequence; what followed is the knit us so very close; for I was "Give the tray to me, I will| “I am.” lstrange point. As 1 exclaimed then his vision, as I am still bis carry it in | “And you do not lie dead in some!‘Jane! Jane! Jane!’ a voice—! right nd I took {t from her hand; she|ditch—under some. stream? And|cannot tell whence the voice came, One morning at the end of the pointed me out the parlor door.|/you are sot a pining outcast|but I know whose voice it was— two years, as I was writing « letter |The tray eh as I held tt. Mary | amongst strangers?” plied, ‘I am coming, walt for me’; to his dictation, he came and bent opened the door for me, and shut} And to divert hirh from an emo jand @ moment after, went whisp- over me, and said |it behind me. tion that was fast mastering him,|eripg on the wind, the words— “Jane, have you a glittering ora | This parlor looked gloomy; a| I began to tell of the happler of |‘Where are you?” {ment round your neck?” |neglected handful of fire burat low| my adventures, Reader, \t was on Monday night! I had a gold watch-chain: I am lin the grate; and, leaning over tt, Again, as he kissed me, painful near midnight-—that I too had gwered “Yes.” }with his bead supported against | thoughts darkened his asp received the mysterious summone;, “And have you a pale blue dress jthe high, old-fashioned mantel-| “My seared vision! My crippled|those were the very words by/ on?” piece, appeared the blind tenant of | strength! he murmured regret-| which I replied to it. I listened to I had. He informed me then, the room fully Mr. Rochester's narrative; but that for some time he had fancied — His old dog, Pilot, lay on one! | caressed, in order to soothe him.|made no disclosure in return. If|the obscurity clouding one eye was, side, Pilot pricked up his ears|I knew of what he was thinking,|I told anything, my tale would be| becoming less dense; and that now when I came in; then he Jumped |and wanted to speak for him, but/such as must necessarily make @ he was sure of it id up with a yelp and bounded to-|dared not. As he turned aside his| profound impression on the mind, He and I went up to London. He ward me. I patted him, and waid | face 4 minute I saw @ tear slide|of my hearer; and the mind, yet had the advice of an eminent-ocu™ softly, “Lie down Mr. Rochester | down from under the sealed eyelid|from its sufferings too prone to jist; and he eventually recovered turned mechanically to ree what|and trickle down the manly cheek. | gloom, needed not the deeper shade the sight of that one eye. He can- the commotion was; but as he saw/ My heart swelled. jof the supernatural. I kept these not read or write much; but he can nothing, he returned and sighe: “Jane!” he said, “you think me,|things theo, and pondered them in/find his way without being led by Give me the water, Mary,” he/|! dare say, an irreligious dag, but my heart the band: the sky is no longer a sald }my heart swells with gratitude to pitted blank to him—the earth no longer I approached him with the glass./the beneficent God of this earth My tale draws to a close; one|, void. When his first-born was Pilot followed me, sttll excited. just now. He sees not as man sees,| word respecting my experience of put into his arms, he could see What is the matter?” he tn-| but far clearer; judges not as man | married life, and I have done, \that the boy had inherited bis own quired | Judges, but far more wisely. 1 did I have now been married ten eyes, as they once were—large, Down, Pilot!” I again said. | wrong. I would have sullied my/ years. I know what it is to Ive) brilliant and black. He checked the water on {ts way | {nnocent fower—breathed gulit onj| entirely for and with what I love THE | END. to his ps, “This {s you, Mary, in | ite purity; the Omalpotent snatched | best on earth. I bold myself su-| PESO =. i it not? jit from me, Of late, Jane-—only—-| premely blest-—biest beyond what) Mary is in the kitchen,” I wg pom of late-—-I began to see the language can express; because! Boston Tech school has a pump swered hand of God in my doom. I began |! am my husband's life as fully as'that moves 22,000 gallons of water He put out bis hand with a quick to experience remorse, repentance; ‘he is mine. a minute. | aaa apply. Less than two months after its introduction Bevo had leaped into such popularity that even our already large facilities could not supply the demand. The result is that soon will be completed (built by public demand) the largest plant of its kind in the world—daily bottling capacity, 2,000,000 bottles, You will find Bevo at all places where refreshing beverages are sold. is sold in bottles only—and is bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH-—ST. Louis Dealers A Plant that Grows with the Times About five years ago we conceived a tremendous idea—the idea of giving to America a soft drink such as it had never before tasted. its cereal ingredients—a soft drink that should be nutri- tious as well as delicious—pure and wholesome. The idea took root—it was cultivated, experimented with, tended with all the care and skill that science could For four years this work went on and then finally about a year ago there sprang into being, Bevo—the drink triumphant. , Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc. A new kind of soft drink in flavor and in Bevo NOILNYD SEATTLE, WASH. om ope »