The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 14, 1917, Page 4

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Editor’s Mail EMPLOYMENT SHARKS Editor The Star: It in the wish — ee of the pec of this state that em a Sidin Aenne ployment of should be put out ————— ——— — “ of business, and North Yakima, at|(Continued From Our Last tesue) ctl Rtte, Wash. Postoffice as Second-Ch least, ends that the wishes of CHAPTER X By mail, out of city, 35 per month up to 6 mom. & mos the people in this respect shall be By carrier, city) a honored, by taking their stand Escape at Last Wabing against the employment “sharks Ho showed all the testimony of North Yakima has won the respect titude that he was able, but and admiration of thousands of ‘od to be wholly guided by me | workmen ofjthts state, and you will! 1 told him the best method I . . 1 fore } that in taking could think of was to fire upon earn, Defore long, that in taking | could ur Friends First Heanor ake Eua eros te thts once ne they tay! andi | ny we ot killed at the firs c [greatest obstacle to industrial/any were not The agreement reached with the operators in bituminows | peace volley, and offered to submit, we coal, under which consumers will get coal at the mine price,| The average laboring man firmly | might save them Shs plus Cost of transportation and 25 cents per ton commission bel bh Agr phe AR as Bh ge f ‘ oy YY ban iy 1 him ‘in his osntb eo dug up is put 0 effect musket ad given him p) Maturally makes prominent the question as to fuel conditions Ler t him, Can't you see that! hand, and a pistol in his belt, and me emongst our allies ch a feeling Is not a healthy one,|his two comrades with him, with i Cold, rather than hunger, was the chief horror borne by |¢ither for oe workin Mum she cot ac ho mana pee in ble hand. ‘The ‘rR } "= ; sue; munity? Every man that claims/two men, going in fron de | % the people of France and Italy last winter, and tremendous |one clas "Ge pride ar ndlbeegpect|avine noise’ at which one ot the ; increase of suffering must come next winter unless something justly resenta the humiliation of/eeamen awoke and cried to the ‘ is done at once betng foreed to pay for the sacted |others England can furnish France and Italy sufficient coal, but |sbt of working for his living The moment he erled out they her difficulty is to ship it across the ct el. Sh ke | Let the authorities remove this| red, and so well aimed thelr shot " } 1,3 hal ecole alt bagel a ecpeaate se CAR Te menace to industrial peace sand/ar the men that one of them was the passage safely but she hasn't any ships, and is losing ships|much of the labor agitation will Sriiat nn the epot aad tec raey day; hence it would seem that America must be largely |disappear forever. Show the work! much wour Th were three depended upon to remove the deficiency ers that they are not friendles®|more jn the company, and one of H ” po 1a { and you will be surprised to #8e¢/them was also slightly wounded. : ere comes in our question of steel ships or wooden! jow quickly they will respond. | By this time I was come; and Ships. To help in transporting fuel across the English chan-| some of the agencies now op rating} when they saw thelr danger, and mel, we have got to supply a lot of ships at the ea pos- iin this city have grafted on labor /that it was in vain to resist, they It sible moment, as Jack Frost waits for nobody er than we can steel ships. American trade ships after the war. Telease American ships for that transchannel fuel service essary fuel? Her Hyphen home-loving woman and, first of all, a good mother. She was born in Germany; but loves America torture. She stands up before thousands* and sings ful presence always felt, hangs a sword. you'd “loved and lost awhile.” nother’s appeal. der, smoke and blood. they have met and killed. her hotel. She was very tired. the hotel to greet her for a sight of her. EDITORIALETTES of San Diego this season. None last season. the way the bigger crops wind blows. GEN. GOETHALS announce steel cargo carriers. The first of these ships June, 19 of U-boat warfare sure h: ether. Doubtiess the Germans don’t believe that we'll do It. after her keel was laid. turned over to the Jap: mow waves his hand when the people cheer. ! EVERY CARGO ship sunk by U-boats means higher prices for | can fi ‘ever there, too. A Safe Place For Your Savings A genuinely conservative bank, one that has grown steadily for bver twenty-five years, and num bers among its satisfied depositors thousands of thrifty workers—can you ask for a more secure place tor your savings account? +The policy of the Scandinavian tt American Bank fias alwa been MY one @f SAFETY for the funds of Mg its depositors. The growth of the bank to its present rank as the i] largest Savings Institution of the Pacific Northwest is a result of this plan of stability comes -— 2 Before starting your savings ac count, make a personal inspection emer’ of the newly enlarged quarters of andinaviag this bank, and quaint yourself with its capable officers. The sense of Safety, Strength and Service is felt the minute you enter Start a savings account here Oey and insure se- curity for your money. Capital and Surplus $1,000,000.00 Resources Over $13,500,000.00 The Scandinavian American Bank Alaska Building, Seattle, Second and Cherry. Use Our Ballard Branch if More Convenient. ai that we can turn out wooden cargo ships much more rapidly Again, the European neutrals, now so anxious about Pres ident Wilson’s export plans, are importing American stuff in American ships, thus saving their own merchant fleets from | U-boat dangers and reserving them for competition with 3 Compelling these neu » trals to put their own fleets into transatlantic service would Why should our ships run the U-boat gauntlet when might be safely supplying France and Italy with the She is a great artist and public favorite; but she is a} She has a great shining face, with a generous smile for one, any one; but her soul shivers and her heart writhes joyously, ously, and for the thousandth time reddens under the of the delighted throng; but over her head, its You've heard her sing “Mein Sohn!” and she took your into the Valley of the Shadow of Death to recover those You've heard her ery, “Death me in!” and wondered that the tomb didn’t open to a She has a beautiful h@me; but it’s under a pall, a pall of The little boy, who, yesterday, at her leit knee and listened and smiled at her folk is in, the German navy; the lad who listened and d at her right knee is in the United States navy, and to-|of the press ow, or next week, or next month, the message may come} Not long ago she got off a train at San Diego and went!that there be an outward change She had recently come | To use his own terse German word, a hospital. But a big crowd, with a band of music, was) There were shouts of welcome, |; “Then, Schumann-Heink stepped forth and sang “The| = @ later Issue he repeats the ad threat that many Germans may eeereres Banner leave for Europe after the war ae possibly a million. While we do MR. HOOVER, 72 carloads of potatoes have already been shipped Just a little straw the awarding of contracts for 19 cannot be completed “TOO LATE!” said German autocrats, when Uncle Sam declared » We can get an army of aviators over to Europe quicker than AT KOBE the Japs have launched a 10,300-ton freighter In four Maybe the U-boat trouble had better CORRESPONDENT ACKERMAN reports that the German crown Gee, what a come A BLACK “black week” of U-boat deviltry, with our destroyers have grown rich Let us call for a generation in the dirty business. a halt Why can't Seattle follow the ox et by North Yakima? working men look to The Star for help in such matters; why can't you take up thelr cause and carry it thru to a successful end? Every man and woman with a spark of decency in them will tnd your stand and appreciate your ef forts. ra KENNEDY DESMOND, Cty, HERR ORTMANN AGAIN Editor The Star: The editor of the Seattle German Press says he would be glad to close the discus jsion as to the anti-Americanism of his paper and of himself, We also |would Iike to have the Issue clos ed, but on condition, If he will cease absolutely his efforts to stir up disaffection, the issue will close iteelt | Confining our remarks to July issues, we note that on July 3 he} printed as his English editorial the Declaration of Independence. He devoted his German editorial) |to a reference to his English lead-| ing article, and a lamentation over {so that the changed times. Changed how? Because, forsooth, the German press of this land dares no longer Speak out all {ts thoughts! H astonish-| 1 is press, hte for| » ent ra, to change its “convic suddenly. He should have asked whether this tx expected| which has fought America since May, 1915, Assured ly we do not ask for a change of onvictions.” But we do tnalst we Insist that their motto, during shall be “Keep the war, meaning, shut.”) “Maulhalten!" your mouth not believe that half so many cher. | tsh his “convictions,” yet we cer. tainly hope that all who do so will boat out, and row towerds the hore; and we found as they ap loroached that there was no leas jand a plain sight of the men, of {|Join the Prussian hegira. We will not compel them to pro-| ceed now, defenseless, thru the sub-| marine war zone, }such a sentence would seem to be | In fact, we will treat them with} generous hospitality, if only they| Yield when they saw five men upon! do not oppose us directly or indi 1, and they were persuaded not | rectly. y to yield, but afterwards to join In another number he even ad.| ‘ery sincerely with us vises his readers to boycott all| It was several hours later and} Americans who are so bold as to resent anti-American propaganda. | And, stra et of all, he Is now a/ sort of pacifist—a Prussian paci fist. He calls aloud for our peace terms. Having watched the aggressor| approvingly for two years, he now after seeing a patient people goat ed into a resistance that fs mak ing the Prussian autocracy trem ble, pleads peace | has said that Ger. ma not be satisfied to accept th au6 ante. Does he want us to offer tribute? The Barbary pirates once asked tribute, and wel . sent them our navy. Shall we now) pay tribute to Teuton p #® will not, even if it shall r power to do so, impone| tes? upon Gert one-tenth of the pains and p Itles that she has so heartlessly pressed down upon her ttle neighbor, whose independence and integrity she had guaranteed by her solemn promise B, F. MAAG. | WAR ATROCITIES Editor The Star IT am exceed. | ingly interested in your paper. But there is one thing nearly in every | number that I now neglect to read, and that fs the “atrocities in Bel gium, {| I am not aiming to minimize these terrible things be defended But Vil simply two other lights these horrible They cannot compare them in (1) I believe that tragedies have not only befallen the Belgian people, | but perha just as great, if not greater, are the miseries at other! places where the armies are now,| withdrawing and again advancing (2) Tho we do not defend brutali ties, we must not neglect to dis criminate between ethics of war and those of peace | When the flare of war burns hot-| test, even the most rigid measures seem not sufficient, Take, for in stance, this country, which has not yet felt the intensity of war and we shall soon see how many meas. ures are now exercised that would never be tolerated during time of peace Thus when we realize Sherman's definition of war we do but what {s Just when we pity all who are jafflicted alike. ye a | SOCIETY WILL MEET | The Puget Sound section of the American Chemical society, will hold its July meeting on Saturday, at 7:30 p, m., at the Elks’ club, A |paper by Charles A. Newhall, on |"Suggested Uses for Low-grade | Washington Coals; Pulverized Fuel Jana Distillation,” will be read, The public is Invited, we can assure him that) i |begeed for mercy | Th Japare th |swear to be faithful to him tn re tain told them he would if they would liven and afterw to Jam ‘din covering the in carrying her back from whence they came cave him all the protestations their sincerity that could b sired, and so our victory was com ship | plete. But there were still sixand twenty hands on board, who, hay ing forfeited their lives to the law, would be hardened in it now, know ing that if they were reduced they should be brought to the gallows as soon as they came to any of the English colonies. Upon this I told him the first hing we had to do was to stave| the boat which lay upon the beach, | they might not carry ber vff, and, taking everything out of her, leave her so far useless as not to be fit to awim While we were thas preparing our designs, we heard the ship fire a gun, an a signal for the boat to come on board; but no boat stirred; and they fired several times, making other signals for the boat. At last we saw them, by the help of my glasses, holst another than ten men in her, and that they had firearme with them. As the ship Iay almost two leagues from shore, we had} a full view of them as they cam whom the captain sald that there were three very honest fellows, who were led into this conspiracy | by the rest, being overpowered and frightened. As soon as they got to the place where their boat lay, it was easy to see that they were under a Rreat surprise to find her atripped of all that was in her, and a great hole in her bottom. After they had mused a while upon this, men came on shore, and three who remained in the boat put her up a} good way into the creek This was what I wished for; and crossing the creek out of their/ ight, we surprised the men before they were aware, one of them lying however just/On shore, and the others being in| such a sickly taste? the boat. There n ied very few | arguments to persuade them to} quite dark before the others came back; but it Is impossible to ex press their confusion when th found the boat fast aground in the creek, the tide ebbed out, and their | men gone! We then came upon them in the| dark, so that they could not see ur number, and, in a word, they all laid down their arms, and begged th lives The captain talked to them of the injury done him, of the condl-} m they w brought to; and| that If they were sent to England| they would all be hanged in chains; | but that if they would join in an! attempt to recover the ship, he would have the governor's (for that| how he spoke of me) engage-! ment for their pardon Charactertzas our methods tn every tra tion, and our cus- tomer are accorded every cour. tesy consistent with sound | us. ness Judgment 4% Paid on Savings Accounts Accounts Subject to Cordially Invi Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST, Saturday—Boilermaker Helpers’ Do You Believe ina .y 2:15 P. M., 8:15 P. M. Admission 25c. STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1917. “Robinson Crus BY DANIEL DeFOE seven |, Sunday—Last Day WHY SHOULD RENA MOONEY not HANG rsHEis GUILTY Moving Pictures of BOMB TRIALS ARENA PAGE 4 3 oe een | Any one may guess how readily such a proposal would be accepted by men tn their condition. They fell down on their knees to the captain, and promised that they would be faithful to him to the last drop. The captain now had but to fur nish his two boats, and man them. Ile made his passenger captain of one, with four other men; and himaelf and bia mate and five more went in the other, And they con trived their business very well, for they came up to the ship about midnight, and took the rest of the crew by surprise; upon which they yielded, and the ship was taken effectually, without any more liv lost As soon as the ship was thus secured, the captain ordered seven guns to be fired, which was the signal agreed upon with me to give me notice of his success; which, you may be sure, I was very | glad to hear, having sat watching upon the shore for ft till near two of the clock in the morning Having thus heard the stgnal plainiy, I laid me down; and it having been a day of great fatigue to me, I slept very sound, tll 1 was somewhat surprised with the noise of a gun; and presently, start- ing up, | heard a man call me by the name of “Governor, govervor and presently | knew the captain's when, climbing up to the top the hill, there he stood, and 1g to the ship, he embraced me in his arms of “My dear friend and deliverer,” says he, “there's your ship; for she is All yours, and so are we and all that belongs to her.” I cast my eyes to the ship, and there she rode within litte more than a mile of the shore. I was at first ready to sink down STAR BEAMS ANSWERED - 5) ie What is the difference between a suite in an apartment house and a desert?—E. D. F. The nulte may be called Mat, but a desert is fatter. What color H ible when in the | paint should I use Water color paint HW. B. 1 want to make my boat tnvie- | | | | Ta tt money BE. M Yes, Paper money is made long- Silver money is round to than keep paper silver?—T. possible longer er. 9 Next Novel “PICKWICK PAPERS” BY CHARLES DICKEN with the surprise, for I saw my deliverance indeed visibly put into my hands, all things easy, and a large ship just ready to carry me away whither I pleased to go, At first, for some time, I was not able to answer him one word; but as he had taken me tn bis arms, I held fast by him, or I should have }fallen to the ground. | The captain brought me six Jolean, new shirts, wix very good |neckcloths, two pairs of gloves lone pair of shoes, a bat and one jpair of stockings and very good sult of clothes of his own, which |had been worn but very little. In a word, he clothed me from head to foot It was a very kind and agreeable present, as any one may imagine to one in my circumstances, But |never was anything in the world of that kind unplearant, awk | ward, and uneasy an it was to me to wear such clothes at their first putting on, | Next morning 1 went on boatd the ship, accompanied by my man Friday. I carried with me for relics the great goat-skin cap I had made, my umbrella, and my par rot; also I forgot to take the money 1 formerly mentioned, which had Jain by me so long useless that it was grown rusty, or tarnished, and could hardly pass for silver till ft had been little rubbed and handled And thus I left 19th of December, the ship's account, in the year 1686, after I had been upon it elght-and-twenty years, two months and nineteen days. In thin vessel, after a long voyage, I arrived in England the 11th of June, in the 80 the Island the I found by year 1687, having been thirty-and- | | five years absent | THE END 2 s BV EDR, ! dead can be, Yet It knows Joy and gladness, and love's | Aelichous madness, And sin end shame and sadness and reed and poverty. The people from the great town they deer our “ten-year-inte” town, Yet ‘from this . sedate town and others here and there, » rapt in wonder, to smash fates aeunder Youth Ana | | the Fortune has te Fer the they call our dear town » fanny and © Gerer town, A very old and sere town, for we know these who run the quick towne, the big and smart and slick Are folks whe come from which city folks call © tinue to do all that it can do. If it doesn't do ev- erything it is ask- |ed to do—or sometimes captiously lordered to do~you may be sure Why does a drug store remind | there ts a good and sufficient rea- you of commencement day at the} L | U. of W.?. It doesn’t Cc. W. son. And the company is ready and willing to give its reasons for every- thing.—From the Traction Com- Probably what you mean to ask | Pany’s Publication, the Electrogram. “Why does a drug store remind ME of commencement day at the U. of WT" If that ts what you mean, the answer is, because you see #0 many fraduates standing around | Why does cistern water have) M. T.B Because cistern water is not well | QUESTIONS MR. E. D. K. CAN. NOT ANSWER Is it possible to flute a skirt with | a plecolo?—Mrs, Little Does the conductor of an or chestra heve to ring up the fare?— | Mre. Lott How often should I feed my clothes horse?—Mra. Moore. Where can I buy some green ta bark?—Miss Anne Thrope. RUDES Dy Berton raley The people in the slick town, the big town, the quick town, They sneer about our the quiet little p! Where life ie sort of drowsy and stores are slightly blowsy And depot loafers fcowsy and stubby as to face. The people from the gay town they call r place ® “Jay” town, hh passe town, as dead as A “In the Heart of Seattle's Wholesale and Shipping District” Commercial Savings Trusts GUARDIAN Trust & Savings BANK Cor, Firat Ave. at Columbia St s’, Shipbuilders’ and Day Double Standard? UNTIL JULY 15 No Show Friday. Children 10c. IN THE WRONG CAFETERIA A drummer, being corn on the cob, ate ear after ear. Finally, the pretty waitress, after she'd brought him his 14th or 15th ear, said tartly “Don't you think you would save half a dollar or so a day if you boarded at a livery stab very fond of we chuckle, ing, eat a heavy breakfast and fol- owns, Without any exercise at all. towns | This company, whose interests are bound up in the development and progress of, the city, will con-! | Lesson s in French-—-No. 15 By Mme. Paul Archinard They have run away- They have played “The Daughter of the Airs Nis ont jove la £11) Pel He should worry He does nothing Il Eel. nuh sawn® ne s'’en fait We had meat to We had monkey Novus avions du s Nous leur avons pri e de 1’ air. zon zhooay 1& feeye duh Jair. to himself. pry. fay pah. ear. in the menu. inge av menu: Noo zaveeon$ di san’zh 6 muhni. We captured some machine guns. We captured some sewing machines. s deg machines a covdre! Noo lUh révon$ pree day m&sheen & coodr! In these lessons the English sentence appears in the first line, the French equivalent in the second, and the pronunciation In the third line. In the pronunciation key, etraight lines over the letters A and U denote the long sound, as in “hAte” and “dUde' in “hAt the over the U indi letters denote the short sound, curved lines over and “bUt"; two dots Americans may approach by pronouncing jong U and long E at the same time. Cut out these lessons and paste them In your notebook. [EXCESSES! | Many people undo the good work of a week's right living by a regu- lar food-sleep de- bauch on Sun- day The grouchy, il-natured = dis. position which is so common on the first work) day may have its root in a Sunday goodly plenter thet given to overeating and lolling about the house. Too many people Iie in bed antil past church time on Sunday morn- There may be Bo harm in cating | a heavier breakfast than usual on Sunday morning, when we have more time to eat and consequently more time to enjoy our food. It is the overeating later in the day that usually is the most harmful. st quantities of rich, indigest- ible food are eaten, and exercise is often Mmited to walking to and | from the table. If one eats three wholesome, substantial meals, with approximately the same regularity; as one does on week days, one will: — feel a whole lot better at the be-/ ginning of the new week period. | Some form of amusement that com bines exercise and pleasure is also low 5 ihe en Dee ee very beneficial in keeping one in There need be no hard and fast trim. rule about the time for going to. Mrs. R. T. W.: “In your opinion, bed on Saturday night, but one| what is the best age to wean a sleep, an extra nap and etill be up! baby?” ought to be able to get a full night’s Ten to 12 months. Yes, it’s inflammation of the delicate membranes lining the bowels. The food you have eaten has fer- mented, made the membranes sore. and they get worse with every meal. Improve Your peat n ae <s Clear Up Inflammation is ain, will not be eubject to euch corrects acidity, abd Good news for the thirsty! Here’sa beverage that not only will taste good while you are drinking it, but that will leave the mouth tasting as fresh asa May morning. One, too, that has that very desirable quality of having no heating after-effects. As a between-meals drink it has the happy faculty of always reaching that dry spot that needs irrigation, With meals, it is an ideal beverage, Not only does its flavor make it go perfectly with food, but its tang adds zest to your enjoyment of a meal— hot or cold. Serve Bevo cold—right off the ice— lukewarm Bevo is not palatable. Bevo—the all-year-'round soft drink See May Tis Seay is Jeter, CAUTION Bevo is sold in bottles only, and is bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST, LOUIS Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc. Dealers : SEATTLE, WASR, v

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