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HE BUSI FF the money for war ts not raised by bond sales, it ) & will be raised by taxation. a This is not in the nature of a threat. It is merely the statement of a plain business proposition. A Liberty bond is an investment returning 4 per cent. Taxation is all outgo, with no return. There are many people who imagine that, by just) holding tight to what they have, they can evade making any payment toward prosecution of the war. All such are wholly mistaken. If dollars will not volunteer, they ‘will be taken by taxation, just as men were taken when | Volunteering failed to produce the adequate armies. THE SEATTLE STAR ¥ 1207 Seve: Ave. st. ; _ |aeanen or SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS ‘Telegra phe aitid i eR doh 8 STAR—TUESDAY, OCT. 23, 1 If the presént Liberty loan issue is not taken, con-1on life's necessaries. gress, in December, will have to tremendously increase the rates of federal taxation, and it may reduce the in- come exemption in the case of unmarried people to $500. How foolish in the man drawing $3.50 per day not to help head off increased taxation by buying a bond that pays him the equivalent of bank deposits! In his case, as in the case of millions of other small income- earners, this bond matter is simply one of saving money at 4 per cent interest, or paying taxes. Nobody is going to escape paying, be he pro-Ger- man, neutral or red-hot pacifist. If he doesn’t invest in bonds, or pay direct income tax, he'll pay in war prices | ’. Ee D. K.'s.’. COLYUM A coward’s fear can make @ coward valiant.—Felitham. The kaiser has suggested that the Bulgars start a drive, Another indication that he's about out of profitably invested in 4 ness nor patriotism. war taxation as soon as pi for the deficiency of such s The bond solici : AMERICA’S WEALTH IS MADE SACRED IN LOAN, SAYS HERBERT QUICK We have been called Yankee hogs. We have been suspected of being devoted to greed rather By Herbert Quick | Former Staff Writer Now Serving BIT—YOUR ALLY OR IR ENEMY? We make life easy by our habits, or we make it hard “Our nervous system grows to the modes in which it is d,” is the scientific explanation of habit _ Some of us exercise our nervous system to our advantage example, we have good habits of putting on our clothes ly, quickly, and without thought. And some of us have bits of temper, or of worrying, or over-eating We seldom recognize the power of any habit until it is rmed. And the great trouble is that we slip into habits, d and bad, drift into them, or slump into them without ht. But they are none the less binding because we have not! ded to make them, and it is none the less hard to break YJ ~ What the new soldier in training suffers from most is Bt the change in his food and collars, but the making over} ‘the habits of his body to suit his new profession. The ting habits of the soldier are often bad and it takes months training to replace them with the fine easy marching ts of the regular army man. Many human habits are being made over by the war, and gasoline bimeelf. than patriotism, years we drew to stream of wealth Greater than any people ever received before. The rest of the world was being drained starved thin, and bled {| but we waxed richer and richer. This been called filthy lucre, undeserved affluence | And now arises the supreme op-| portunity of all our history | We suddenly find ourselves in the position of trustees of all this) wealth, and in no sense its owners, Destiny has be very good to America, Fate has made us the tichest people on earth, the hugest reservoir of industrial power the planet ever bore. The reat of the world and some of us have thought that destiny meant to let| us get away with all this plunder; | but it Is not so. God knew better all the time. It belongs to Liberty, and not to us. Britain, the mother of our Liberty, and France, its godmother, have mn sending {it to us for three years to be held in trust for their supreme hour, and for the ex-; treme hour of democracy itself, . | as a Member of the Federal worst has happened—the Farm Loan Board of pumpkin ples has gone up.| Money used to save liberty to ® ste cables | the world becomes sacred. The Lib-| Copenhagen This in addition to} erty Loan all she's getting from the cat money | Written for The 8 | | } | of French and British cannon? that great cause. | Ss Conastituttona 1/ liberty was born| in England, and was transplanted in America by our forefathers Our history and England's are the ame down to 40 aKo. The abstracts of ithe to our liber- joa run back to Vyelif, John ial, Jack Straw, som Alfred, John Pym, John Hampden, Oliver Cromwell, John Mi n, Robert Bruce, Wil liam Wallace and to Magna Chaita and the Petition of Right The defeat of the Spanish Ar- mada, the victories of the partia- mentary armies, the parliamentary triumphs of Pitt, Fox, Burke and Barre are as much our victories as those of the of the British Islands, The democracy bullt up in When threecent postage comes, father will have another excuse for) not matling the letter mother told) him not to forget. oe P. 8. (From a Woman's Viewpoint) A Harvard university chemist has perfected a tear-gas to produce copious weeping. It was designed for army use, but ought to have a large circulation among movie actresses. “My wife and daughters are mak ing me a comfort kit,” writes D. T I'll wre ft on the morning trip from Wert Seattle to the Square, and on the way back at night.” DAILY NET War soe The fellow hoarding $50 or $100 which might be Liberty bond is simply inviting the tax collector to take his hoard without any tangible return, and that’s a policy which is neither The longer the war the higher the war taxation. The Liberty loan is a means toward stopping yssible. If the ubscription, tor is a gentlemanly, patriotic, well- o | The War Is good busi- war and war is not| stopped soon, there must be subscription to fifteen more billions of Liberty loan bonds, or taxation to make up Giving the President a and Enriching Mrs. Wilson’s Face wisher. The tax collector carries a cold-chisel and @ The one offers you profit; the other a bill. As a financial proposition, the should have the call. ye On the other side ts country, self respect, re ek ee That’s the business side of it. the love of home, the love of patriotism. : If you are a hundred per cent man, if you are a hundred per cent American, your purchase of Liberty bonds will prove it—prove it to yourself and to your | \fellows. , BUY YOUR BONDS; HOLD YOUR HEAD HIGH, ae | America’s determinativu ington Barracks. Jaw as he watched with Mra. Wilson demonstrations of modern With sympathetic eyes that saw also the strain of the conflict in France, Bulldog Jaw I With Sympathy SS ja the world of Prussianism is shown in the set of President Wil warfare by the engineers’ corps at Mrs. Wilsos raw walls scaled and trenches dug in this mimic war. mass meeting, held to deal with| thru an apparently organized effort the slugger situation, met Saturday | to discredit the reports of victims f NESS SIDE OF IT—AND THE OTHERS WOMEN’S VIGILANCE COMMITTEE ON JOB is no reason why the soldier boy should receive all of discipline and benefit. Once in a while it is a good plan forall of us to take of our peculiar assortment of habits—and then to treat as allies—or as enemies. 10 BARGAINING ABOUT BELGIUM When a Black Hand gang succeeds in kidnaping a victim, immediately opens “negotiations” on the basis of payment festoring the lost to his family. When an embezzler is run down, he usually tries to bar- for his liberty by offering to return a part of the stolen iT MUST GO BAC keep it would give us victory, but it would kill the nation’s soul. We are vouch. sated the privilege of proving that our lucre is not filthy but holy, THE LIBERTY LOAN MEANS THE SANC- TIFICATION OF AMERICA'S WEALTH, To the great chancery of the God of Batties we shall go with hands full, d come out with hands clean. Thank God for that! Key Men Will Dance noon. lon the ground that they are hye | The committee finds the situa-| tertcal. |tion very serious. While fear has| The committee plans an exhaup The vigilance committee of the|made some women hysterical, the | tive investigation before making @ Seattle Women's Personal Protec-| committee finds that the grave| report. Women and girls who have tion league, which was organized | danger {s that the public will be| cases to report are invited to call | last Wednesday, at the women’s | lulled into a false sense of security | the chairman at East 4245. Nuxated Iron to Make New Age of Beautiful Women and Vigorous Iron Men ity will dance on October 27 at Say Physicians—Quickly Puts Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and Most Astonis* continent at| Douglas hall for the benefit of thelr!“ ine ‘Youthful Vitality Into the Veins of Men—It Often Increases the Strength \ This is the first of a series of and Endurance of Delicate, Nervous ‘“Run-Down” Folks” 100 Per Cent. in Two Weeks’ Time. the British Isles ts our democracy Our titles to our liberties, the! validity of our government ts on| trial in the trenches today | A hundred and forty years ago thru Franc ald, formed our own separate government for the administration of our share of this liberty Since that time we have been jengaged in the great task of devel-| oping {t, and to the best of our im-| perfect ability perfecting it | For 14 rs we have been get-| |ting much money in America. We! |have had the greatest opportunity | jever vouchsafed any people to j amass riches. | We have had , and a virgin | Just the time when commerce has | been spreading over all the earth by steam and electricity We have gained the reputa- tion of being money-grabbers. _ Justice recognizes no such deals. To let the thief go is pounding a felony and a crime in itself. To pay ransom kidnapers is against all public policy, and only where the pnized relatives succeed in evading the officers of the law is it done. . > When Germany attempts to bargain for peace by offering “restore” Belgium in whole or in part—usually in part- is playing the “Black Hand role There will be no bargaining with Germany about Bel- im. “Go—Get OUT” are the only terms. Germany must! et out first, before any other bargaining begins erman “colonies, German occupation of northern France or Poland | are entirely different questions. ___ The occupation of the territory of a declared enemy is a} erent thing from the wanton seizure of the lands and ds of a peaceable neutral, whose neutrality was guaran- | the aggressor. = freedom, democ- such events. The telegraphern’ war relief corps will locate positions left vacant by drafted telegraphers indred. wh Roms ce ouls eoch breakers crashed heavily upon ed away illimitable, immense the ocean grand,” said Hortense Hautone, the young im- | Opinions of Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Surgeon of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, New York City; | James Louis Beyea, for fifteen years Adjunct Professor in the New York Homeopathic Medical College and Wm. R. Kerr, Former Health Commissioner, City of Chicago. } | r A New York politician gave 300 NE Since the harmonicas to the Rainbow divie-| jon. Let's see the Germans invent! & gas mask that will beat a harmon-| fea. N rxate,” an Fre has taken the country torm. It is conservatively mated that over three mil ¢ anny are taking untry alone, M results are by hoth phy So much # dict that w em new age of utiful, rosy-cheek- and vigorous tron And That Exhausts the Subject | Whereas my wife, Mabel Boutin, " r ; * left my bed and board without | he white ie supreme issue of this war—whether justice shall so yanbor or thom B com hereby | The sea stretch or crime be condoned—rests upon Belgium. lforbid all persona trusting or har-| “Gee, ain't If the world consents to bargain about Belgium, it admits | boring her on my account after this | #0° > — as she reclined luxuriously in her own specially 2 ; " iati | date WILLIAM BOUTIN, | ported sand _ that crime can be made the subject of business negotiations, |" . * i “Yes, ain't it," responded Clarence Ponsonby D’Artagan, heir to "and that crime may be profitable. % Whereas I saw Mr. Routin’s post-|a hundred millions : Such bargaining will whitewash Germany and persuade |ing notice in Saturday's Banner, 1 her to try the same thing again. | wish to reply to it. I left my own Pe | bed and board, as he never had any | inet to leave, and as for board, I fur. |nished my own board for the last 11 years; as every one knows, he never worked in the winter time, end his board had to go on just the same. My own pame being on all trading bille in town for 11 years so I hereby forbid all persons of trusting him on my account, as I shall pay no bills of his contracting after this date MABEL BOUTIN Bennington.Vt., Banner oes The New York suffs have issued a bulletin advising women not to spend their money for ice cream soda, because {t Is fattening. Now there’s a reason that haa weight | A street car that's amashed, a fin-| “Daughter,” ger that’s mashed, A plaintiff who's pale, wan and thin, A Judge and a jury worked up to a fury , My Gawd, in! . a the smooth beach. women Ferdinand King, 9 Physician and Med when interviewed this subject, said: “There can be no vigor iron men with- out iron. P CHAPTER I! “How wonderful it is," exclaimed Hortense, “to find a kindred ; how marvelous that the first time I meet a guy like you I find you sympathetic in admiration of this sea shore stuff!” “Kid,” replied Clarence, passionately, “the minute I seen |knew our tastes were synonymous.” of anaemic in pale; the he muscles lack brain faae and the memory fails and often ame weak, nervous, deanon When m the blood ses go from you I the acaroni and sago, farina, rnme oun seen have re Farth ted « to be tap spaghett and deget necessary to enable your to change food into Hving by throwing |tiseue. Without it, no matter how S the water in|Much or what you eat, your food are cooked, ses through you without a umnhe arere You don't get it, and as a me weak, pale Uke a plant tying to « 1 deficient in iron, If you are not strong or well, you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. five in tablets ¢ in three times p ale for two weeks. ur strength again how much you have gained seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were ailing ail the while e their strength and endurance I taught my medical students i such remedies were generally value loss, but in the case of Nuxated I severe teste made on myself ani numerous patients, have absolute inced me that it is a remedy of extraordinary merit and on should be generally nme one | lutely h th- | blood he said, ominously, if For this wowsEeER CHAPTER Iii, The stern figure of Hortense’s father appearea on the scene in a sumptuous bathing sult of red and purple stripes three inches wide “Daughter,” he said, ominously, “who is this wowser?” “1,” said Clarence, rising hanghtily to his feet, “am > s Ponsonby D'Artagan, of the Ponsonby D'Artagans, of Deep Stuff | Manor, Ponsonby parish, Ponsonby county, North Carolina, The chief of police believes that) bedient renvante Wankeganites should all ane ome seo purchase a “gee ae ee ; log chain and attach {t to the reer| aerlige 2 laine eer of the car when it {# left standing at a curb, “If a thief makes off | with the car, the rattle of the chain on the brich it will attract |suffictent attention to put the pers w to what's * says the chief. —Waukegan use salt when t enough salt hmiastoner Wm. City. of Chicago, Nuxated Tron tx health effect and welfare ake known Tam well and want to own great areely due to; my personal uae of Nuxate CHAPTER Iv. if I Foal it is such a valuable uel and Clarence has not returned. Hortense’s | remedy, that | 1 in father licks his lips with a dry and parched tongue ently he |cvery hosp risee and saunters toward the hotel, where he finda Cla p in the bar, putting aw his fifth Bronx Hello, old party,” cries Clarence “What'll it be “Make it the same,” says father For they, too, are kindred souls Hortense remains reclining luxuriously in her own imported sand and the sea still stretches away, illimitable, immense how the money rolls Clarence Ponsonby and your af IT have “if you're my obedient This sea air servant, run is soitainly up great irely An hour has passed t jan both in this coun Special Reductions on Plates, Crowns and Bridgework. No Charge FOR PAINLESS EXTRACTIONS bere Co Jaques, Visiting Diizabeth’s’ Hospital, said I have never medic my 80th birthda ol Nuxated Iron has made me feel lik@ a new man. Friends say, ‘What have you been doing to yourself, yy look so well and full of titer tm y opinion there fe nothing like ganic iron—Nuxated Iron—to youthful strength and power tn the veins of the weak, run-down, im. firm or aged. But beware of the o! forms of metallic tron which ofteay 5 do more harm than good. To absolutely sure that my patients get} rid themselves of all real organic tron and not some fanm gl [ of dyspepsia, liver and of the metallic variety, I e ables in from ten to four- prescribe Nuxated Iron in its teen da 4 time simply by taking inal packages.” iron in the proper form, And this, NOTE: Nuxated Iron, which te pres > And thi Nuxated Tron, e atte they had in some sages t Gn scribed and recommended above by BYs doctoring for mies Without ob- aictans in such a great variety of taining an: J is not pat medicine nor remedy, but one which is well to druggista and whose iron 6 are widely pre cians both tn titwente ribed by eminent Pape urope and Amertoa, gante tron produdtm, i does not injure th make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the contrary, it ts potent remedy in nearly ail forma ef digestion as well as for nervous, jown conditions. The manufacturers ha such great confidence in Nuxated Iron, that they offer to forfeit $100.00 to any heritable institution if they cannot take: any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron, and Increase their strength 100 per cent or over in four weeks time, prow vided they have no serious otgania trouble. "They also offer to refund your have alw money If it does not at | double vour escribing adver-|*rength and endurance tn te 7 r fiftesn Te Ia dinpensed In this city ty tee ee ssor int Co., Martell Drug Co, Suites Pi Medical Co and all good druggists, i Sun “Why not,” whynote the man at the next desk, “attach a big hook to the chain? This might catch the copper by the leg and Jerk him Into the machine, where he would be put even wiser.” ein it Nuxate Iron I e remiss in my duty not » mention it I have taken it - myself and given it to my patients » find him with ost surprising and satisfac- of a boy of tory results, And those who wish vim to iner their strength, powe in and e d it a most w rfully effec- Louts Reyea, for 15 years Adjunct Professor in the New York Homeopathic Medical College, says: “As a physician I have always en opposed to fp ve es taking iron or filled bh with newed aang a0 he w nm bad health and vitality Mutchie-Kister. Kenosha friends have r cards announcing the en of Miss Florence Kister and Arthur Mutchie, both of Racine,-Kenosha News. Tee-Hee tive re eee uoyanc ty pathic A New York saloonkeeper says | drinks will soon be $1 apiece, A| great victory for prohibition. when you wish “ee ie tonle nad blood bullde puts the real youthful vigor i the old forms of metnliite tron, woh try Nuxated Iron, an or money refunde: 8 ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS Southeast Corner First and Pike . VAN AUKEN, Mgr. Dentiata in Se Absolutely pain work than any other anteed for 16 years. charge leas for firat-c ttle? Their work # extracting | Fingerprints | The engagement of Miss Blate| Finger, of Far Rockaway, and Sam- uel Printz, of New York, has been announced If you have been wal a the day, we keep stot pm. Sundays | LADY ATTENDANTS. UNION DENTISTS OVER\OWL DRUG STORE. lle Hea! ity of Chigggo, Neen a Mlegeo, forme WO flve-wr oot the use of SST CCH crh READ STAR WANT ADS! Fastest wast